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                  <text>--Local briefs---, Eleven die

'

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Racine man hurt in wreck
"

A Racine man was Injured In an accident Sa.turday, at 8:15
p.m., o.n Ohio 124, in Sutton Township, according .to the
Gallla·MPigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Charles A.-Boggess-, 26; of Racine. was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the EMS. He was later trailspPrted to
Grant Hospital in Columbus by Lifi'Fllght, where at last report
he was listed In poor condition In the Critical Care Area .
Boggess was driving west on his motorcycle when a car
driven by Da niel M. Depue, 20. of Pomeroy, tried to pass
another eastbound vehicle and struck Boggess' motorcyCle.

-.

. .·Temperatures· dip

· United
. .By·PJI\CK
BEARY
On OhiO roads
.
ress International
over weekend drove
c!~~o~!~e~t~~i~:~~~~;o2o~~~
south toward VIrginia

Monday, July 27, 1987 :::_
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into 40s

· the 40s In north'ern Michigan rieed a blanket," the weath~~ : : :
early toda y · - "cool enough to . service said. ·.

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Daily stock. . pric.e.s. .

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E. :

EMS receives 11 weekend calls

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Tigers

~ ... J

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AID"'-25TH ANNIVEllSAilY~

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COl'-

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To get physicals tonight

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' Vol. 37, No. 56

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seve n De moc ratic pres id e ntial ·h op.e fuls
Wednesday ,
·
With 42 of the nation 's 50 governors in
·attendance at this · resort overlooking Lake
Mi chigan. th e conference has also ·given t he
gro~p·.s only presidential candidate a chance to
put himself on display.
"I'm always doing a sales job," said Massac hu setts Gov. Michaei ·Dukakls, a Democrat Who
pla yed a prominent role in a number of panel
discussions and was followed through lhe
corridor s by reporters and television cameras.
Dukakis was given the chance Monday I? tout
his state's law requiring advance notice of plant
closings as he and several colleagues urged
Congress to enact similar legislation na tionwide.
He also had a high profile In th e AIDS debat e,

~SNOW

11

.RAiN . illsHOWERS ·

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W,

FRONTS:
Warm
Cold
Static . . Occluded
Map shows minimum temperatures . At least 50% ot any shaded area is to recast
to recetve precipitation indicated
·
· UPt
WEATHER MAP - Thunderstorms are.likely over south Texas
extend
and Florida. Scaltered showers and thunderstorms
from southern Minnesota acros~ parts of the Ohio Valley Into the
Carolinas and Georgia. ;1nd over the central Gulf Coast region.
Thunderstorms willal•o be scattered over the southern two thl~ds
of the Plateau region and the ·southern ;tnd central Rockies, being
most numerous over the central .mountains of Arizona. A few
showers will dot northern New England.

will

Area deaths
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Funeral services were held
today at the Wilco~ e n Funeral
Home for Ra v O'dell Smith, 73,
Glenwood, who died Friday evenlng in Pleasa nt Valley Hospital.
from injuries re~eived ip fa ll.
The Rev: Buford Blevins a nd the
Rev. Carl Adkins officiated.
Burial was in Pet e Meadows
Cemetery, Gl(&gt;nwood.
Born March 3, 1914, at Range r.
he was the son of Sinda Adkins
Smith, Glenwood, and the late
Olio D. Smith .
He was a member of the Becco
Un ited Baptist Church, Becco, a
retired civil. engineer for America n Electric Powe r. Fairmont.
and worked for several yea rs for
Mar t.inka Min es, Fairmont.
Surviving in addition to his
mot her are a daughter and
son·in-law, Raedean Ogg and
Tony Ogg, Huntington : one stepdaught er, Wilma Reese, St . Cla ir
Shore, Mich .; two sisters, Le nora
S. Clay, Gl enwood, and Bonnie
Hogan, Barboursville; a sisterin-law. Marga ret Smit h, Glenwood ; one niece, one great-niece.
one granddaughtet', one 'g ra nd·
son and one grea t. nephew .

ing; ·One
Lee. W. McCo·
mas, Middleport; three grandc hildren, Betsy E . McComas.
Belpre; · Joyce E . McComas.
Little Hocking; Jason L. McComas. Little Hocking.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday a t 11 a.m. at th(&gt; White
Ethridge Funeral Home, 12~ Lee
St.. BPI pre with the Rev . Don
Kochersperger officiating. Bur·
ial will be in Rockland Cemetery .
Fr iemls. may ca ll at the funeJ"al
home Tuesday from 7 to 9 and
Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Clifford Kennedy

. Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions- Dessle
Kuhn, Langsville.
Saturd&lt;IY Discharges -Millie
Price.
·
Sunday Admis~ions - Ma y
Holler. Racine.
Sunday Discharges
Bett.v
Taylor. Ellen Couch.

-~- - --

........

EVEREADY
ENERGIZER

OILY, UNSCENTED,
ORIGINAL. OR
SKIN

SOuth Central Ohio
Partly cloudy ioday, with a
t hancl' of thunderstorms and
highs In t he upper BOs. Pa r tly
cloudy tonight. With a chance of
showers and a low in the upper
60s. Partly clouds Tuesday·, with
a chance of showers and thunder·
storms and highs In the mid 80s.
The probability of precipila ·
t ion fs 30 percent today, 40
percent tonight and 50 percent
Tuesday :
Winds will be light and nor· ·
theasterly today and light and
f'asterly tonight .
Extended Foreca.'ll
Wednesday through Friday
Fair through. the period, with
highs In the 80s Wednesday and
ranging from 75 to 85 Thursday
and Friday . Overnight lows
mainly will be in the 60s early
Wedn esda y and between 55 and
65 Thursday and Friday

Mmllll

SUAVE
SKIN LonON$
10 OZ. BOTTLE

SKIN
LmiON S

.AQUA NET

LADY SPEED S11CK .
AtmPERSPIRANT

HAIR SPRAY
9 OZ. SIZE

1.5 OZ. SIZE'

coa5AeaUTTER,

By LORI SANTOS
WASHI NGTON (U PII -A ttor. ney Gene ral Edwin Meese. d~ ·
fending his role in the Iran Contra scandal as limited and
legal. asserted today there was
" nci des ire or plan" to keep the
adminlstrallon's secret cleallngs
· hidden from Congress.
Meese, a friend and adviser of
Ronald Reagan for mort' than a
decade, also Insis ted to· the
congressional committees Investigating the president 's worst
crisis t}lat U.S. weapo ns were not
sold to Iran In an arms·for·

SU~ER, 3· 19
·

.

HERRS

Ohio's Super· Lotto
jackpot'
. highest

-~

f.ffi;(.i

'~-."'
,!om&gt;
1·-··
..

POTATO

I!!!!

C'HIPS

host a ges ~eal.

6 OZ. BAG·

89&lt;
• •

Southern

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT &lt;;IUANTin!S

board...

PRICEs.Effi!CTIVE JUL~ 27 THRU AUGUST 2. tqtt7 · i'IOt RESPOI'ISIILE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS,

.

RITE

'

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY

,~

208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY; OHIO ·
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

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"No deals were to be made
with any of the groups who had
taken .o r were holding American
hostages, " Meese said In an
openlng sta tement ·prepared for
his first' day of testimony at the
televised lran-Cont ra hearings.
"Th(' pres ident was firm on
this point. .. : No direct dealings
with the hostage-takers nor the
payment of any type of ransom
were ever ·contemplated," the
nation's top law enforcement
officer maintained.
Meese, who gave lega l appro·
val for the Jan. 17, 1986, pres:ld'Em:
tlal i'finding" that Indefinitely
del a)(~ notice to Congress of the
secret Iran initiative, said the
expecfation at the time was that
the administration "would notify
Congress · a~ soon a~ possible
after the hostage's were ori board
an airplane, out of the Middle
.East, and under the coptrolof the
United States."
The arms sales, which actually
began through Israel In August
1985, were not revealed until
··- "-"

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removed and patched with epoxy before the entire
surface is overlayed with the hlgh·bondln!(
L'Xpo~y seal. Maidens said there's a good
posslhlllty the bridge will not re-open until
mld·August, Instead of lhe original . July 31
.deadline.
· ·

.H earings resume;
Meese to testify

YOUR CHOICE

EXTRA RELIEF
OR ALOE VERA

SLENDE-R,
REGULAR OR
SUPER PLUS

Lloyd McComas

., .

MENNIN

BRIDGE nECK WORK Con~lru ctlon
workeno are preparing ihc deck of the PomeroyMason Bridge for an epoxy overlay , Jay Maidens,
of I he Maldens,,Jenklns Construction Co., re:
ported last wet&gt;k that' arly unsound purtions. of
t'Oncrete In the !(rilte of the bridge deck w111 be

•

Cki_fford $. tSkipl Kennedy. 60,
Riverview Drive. Pomeroy, died
today at Holzer Medical Center
following and !'xtended iliness.
He was born Fi'bruary 10, 1927
a t Woodberry. K. J . the son of the mornings.
late Wllllam D. and Effie St ails
Kenned~· .
'He was a member of th&lt;' United
ME'Ihodist Churc h. Pomeroy. and
I.B. E. W. Loca l 968.
Parkersburg.
He .is . surviVed by his wife,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Clarice Kennedy; son and jackpot
for the Super Lotto gair!e
daughter·in·law, Clifford J. and haS grown to $15 m!lllpn, the
Kar.la Ke nnedy, Rutland; son,
it has been sl.nce the
C'hr islopher S. Kennedy, Pome· chighest
urrent
format
was adopted.
roy: two brothers. William s .
The jackpot rose Saturday
Ke nn&lt;'dy Long Bottom, a nd Le- night when, for the fourth consecroy (Jackl Kennedy, Chester.
utive drawing, no winners were
Lloyd Franklin J0cC'omas . 78,
Funeral services will be held found.
Numbers 'd rawn were 21,
Little Hock ing di ed late Su nday. Wi'dnesday at l p.m. al Ewing 27, 33, 35, 39 and 42.
at St. J os e ph Ho s pital. 'Funeral Home wiTh the Rev. Carl
Parkersburg.
E. Hic~s and the Rev. James
HP was born In Meigs Count y ~ Corbitt officiating. Burial will be
Ohio Lottery officials said
the so n of the la te James Elis ha in Chest er Cemetery. Friends $!),813, 991 worth· of tickets were
and Mary Tewksbury McComas may call at the funeral home sold for Saturday's game.
Mr. McComas was ·a tea¢her Tuesday from 2 to 4 and. 7 to 9.
,The 204 tickets that had five of
and prihcipal at Little Hocking
the six numbers are each worth
School for 41 years: He .was a
· $1,000, while the 9, 723 tickets with
memb£-r of Little !{ocklng United
four numbers are each worth $80.
Methodist Church, a 50 year
Saturday's other winning Ohio
member and past master of ·
Lottery nl!mbers with tlckel
Coolville Masonic Lodge 337, al\d
sales and payouts: ·
director of the Alltel Telephone
Dally Number - 996, ticket ·
Co., Hudson, Ohio.
Conti nued from page l
sales totaled $1,459,646, with a
He Is ·survived by ·his wife,
payoff due or $454,8Q5.50.
Attending were Joseph
. Mildred Dunfee McComas; two
PICK-4 - 9138, ticket sales
Thoren, · Charles Pyles, Don totaled $198,294.50, 'with a payoff
sons and .daughters-in·law, Ro·
nald L. and Barbara S. McCo-, Smith, Denny Evans; Scott due or $89,434. PICK-4 $i straight
mas, Belpre; James ·E. and. Wolfe, board members, Dennie bet pays $3,64K PICK·4$1 box bet
pays $152 .
• Linda W. McComas. Lit tle Hock- Hill, clerk· treasurer, and Ord .

urging mandatory testing for the military and
authority to test Immigrants from high-risk
countries.
The assoc(atlon's human resources task force
unanimously approved an · AIDS resolution
Dukakls helped draft that called the disease ''the
nalion's No. 1 public·health problem" but which
ducked the Issue of whether testing should be
voluntary or mandatory .
·
"Th ere just Isn't consensus - how much,
what's mandatory and what isn't." Dukakis
reported to the pan~!.
Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste urged a statemenl
suppPrting "confidential voluntary testing " for
acquired lmnnu ne deficiency syndrome, which is
lranstnitted through sexual contact and intravert·
ous needles and destroys the body.'s ability to fi ght
c'

..

disease. Scientists estimate it could afflict more
than 270,00() Americans by 1991.
The resolution approved by th etas(~ force called
for a ... national education and prevention
program" with an emph asis on counseling young
people before they reach the age where they can
contract the disease . .lt'also urged changes In the
Medicaid program so AIDS patients can receive
care ill home.
·
Federal ass istance should go io state and local
governments and community organizations for
the program, it said.
." Although ·this is an era of tight federal
budgetary copstralnts ,' the. seriousness of the
problem calls for an increased federal investment, " it said; Withou t identifying sources for the
federal money .

.

--

Weather

25 Cents

A Mul.imedia Inc. Newspaper

State agencies
to cooperate on
.
providing better· children's · serv~ces ·

'
---

1 Section, 10 Pages

is estimated at an affordable plan Hoffman reported. The
$180.000 and because approval of remaining $20,000 would be paid ,
for locally. Hoffman requested ·
the revised plan is· expected.
and
received authorization from
Middleport
"will
probably
be
one
Review by the Ohio Environcou
ncil
to file application for the
mental Protection Agency of of just a few commu nit ies able to
HUD
funding.
Middleport' s proposed munici· comply" with stricter EPA reConrail has informed council
pal compliance plan to upgrade quirements Interjected Mayor
·the village sewage system has Fred Hoffman. The proposed · they have acquired the abancompliance plan was submitted doned Chessie System right-of·
been completed.
way between their own property
According to a letter to village to EPA ih December 1985.
and
property owned by the
Preparations
are
underway
by
.
council from EPA's Southeast
village
at Hobson. A barge
the
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
ValDistrict Office, approval of the
loading
faci lity is to be conley
.Development
District
to
plan is ex pected subj ect to
structed
in th e area and the
app
ly
for
$160,000
in
Housing
and
.submisslo'n of final papetwork .
railroad
company
is asking for
Urban
Development
funds
Revisions of an earlier version·
through
the
Ohio
Department
·
o
f
village propan
easemenl
across
of a cl)mpllance plan for Middleerty.
Coun~il
feelsthey should
port became necessary because Development for implementaContinued on page 10
of extreme cost. The revised plan tion of Middleport's compliance

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Hospital news .

•

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff

i:;JI•J --

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enttne

Complete review of village's
revised ·sewage system plan

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tue~diW, July 28, 1987

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TRAVERSE . CITY, Mi ch. - The nation's
governors are calling fpr ··a federally funded
education and prev~ntion program to halt the
spread of AlbS but were unable to agree on .
Whether mandat ory testing should be requited.
. The National Governors Association, which was
. to end Its annual convention' today, was expected
!o approve a seriE's of policy st'a tements on AIDS
and other Iss ues today.
The group was wrapping up Its three-day
.annual convent.lon that h'as emphasized the need
to mak!' American product s more compet,ltlve In
world markets through cooperation between state
and federa l governments and among the states
th.ems elves.
..
.
Democratic governors planned to then planned
·to TravP I to nea rby Mackinac Island to meet a il

•••••.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
!· GRAND PRIZE: CHRYSLER CONQUEST TSi.

.,.....

Page4

Clear tonight. I..ow be- ,
. tween 60. and . 65. Sunny
Wednesday . Highs in mid
80s. Probability of rain near
zero.

NatiOn's governors discuss AIDS battles

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846
Pick 4
4133

Copyrighted 1987

DAYSOI

:

Daily Number

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today with storms ·that have
(..\s' ol 10:30 ~.m.)
·
Fe~er~l Mogul... ..... ... .. ... , .. .47~ , '
cracked
a
weeklong
heat
wave,
Provided
by
Goody(!ar
T&amp;R .......... ......... 69 ' 4 "
By United Press International
dropped
base]1all-slze
hail
and
Bryce
and
Mark
Smith
Heck'
s
In~
. .. .. ............ .... .... .. ;J~ .
Eleven people, Including a
uprooted
trees.
·
of
Blunt
EIIL~
&amp;
I..oewl
Limited
Inc
. .... .................. .46 ~. •
one·month-old Infant, were killed ,
However,
high
temperatures
Firm
1
Price
Multimedia
Inc....... .. .. .. ... ... 72'.4 • .
In traffic accidents across Ohio '
near
100
degr\!I'S
threatened
to
Am
Electric
Power
.·
...
..
..........
27
Rax
Restau·rants
.... .. ...... ... , .. 5Yt: .
during the weekend, . the state
cook the South and the Plains for AT&amp;T ..... , ... .. ..... .. .. ... .. .. ... .. .. .. 31 Robbins .&amp; Myers .... .... ... .. , .. 2~~ ,
Hlgwhay Patroi reported today.
The victims died in 10 -acci- a nother day, the · National Ashland Oil ..... .. .. .. ...... .. ... ...... 68 Shoney's Inc.. .. ................... ~ .
Bob Evans Farms .... ........... .. 25. Wendy's Inti. .. .. .. :.. .... ..... .... 10· • '
dents, a patrol spokeswoman weather Service said.
Temperatures dipped as low as Charming Shop pes ... .. ... ...... 29 ~
Worthington J'nd .............. .. .. 21 ~ .:,.
said. · There were six deaths
.......:.:.---~----~-'----"--'--------:-__:_--------.-.'
'
Sunday, four Satur\iay and one ,- ___:
-... . '":•Meigs Count y Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
• :.. . ..
Friday night. Five of the autoover the week end, six Saturday and five Sunday .
crash victims were .not wearing
Saturday at 5: 03a.m., Syracuse transp9rted Rodney Neigier
seal belts .
from an a uto accident on Forest Run Road to Veterans
The Infant clied Sunday In a
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:59, a.m. to Martin St .. for
two-car accident In Perry County
Russell Nitz to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mlddle(iort at 8:06.
that also claimed tbe life of a
p.m: to Beech St. for Tiffany Allen to Veterans Memorial
17-year-old girl. Both victims
Hospital; .Syracuse at 8:21p.m. transpPrted Andy Boggess from
were from New Lexington.
.
a motorcycle accident on . Route 124 to V~:terans Memoria l
•;..,:"'· .
The pairol co~nts •. fatalities
flosp\fai : la ter to Grant Hospital by Lifeflight; Middleport at
that result from accidents on.the
"'· .,
9:52 p.m. to High_df for Della Riley to Vetera~s Memorial
state's
public roadways each
Hospital: Racine at 11:07 p.m. was c;llled to an auto accid~nt on
non-holiday weekend between 6
Route 338 but no transports were made.
.
p.m. Friday and midnight
Sunday at 12; 22 a.m .. MlddlepPrtto Coal St . for James Powell
sunday.
to .Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 1:58 a .m.
The victims :
transpPrted Shawn Sayers to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
~lo\.~1/W··· ·
Sunday
later to Grant Hospital by Lifeflight; Middleport at 9:17p.m. to
Piqua: Terry W. Sheperd, 24,
the Stiper·America station for Shannon Scheider to Veterans
Dayton,
In a one-car accident on
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 9:39 p.m. transported
•
Interstate
75 In Shelby County.
Bob Lee from a motorcycle accident on Success Road to
Ashtabula: Alan A. Gault, 32,
US HAYED IV
·0
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital; · Pomeroy at 9.:53 p.m.
USAot 1rcMI C~-""'" oM ~• • OM c1H1ifit$
I
Andover
,
in
a
one-car
accident
on
transported Brian Bailey from a motorcycle accident on .
....._...-..- ...... lichlto,., u~..,.
U.S. 6 In Ashtabula County .
,......,. US. W""-" ....,.,...... l.r ,..,.. oa oood ' - - - I
~
·success Ro ad to Camden-Clark Memoria l Hospital.
~USAiidly, Hot0116id r.. ,..._. ~e&gt;COO'IOda . Ah o..l-11 I '
New Lexington: William H. ...
~.,.10131itf ,_ '"-!NOT,..,~ ... 1,17- 11 1 I
n,.&amp; ~. 1211 • • 20, 12m &amp;271 l91t-11J . j, Jill , 41\, ,
Rose III, one month, and Lynne 20-2S,
2 &amp; ... sm. 612•-zo, 111. 21 •
,
. A. Lacey,l7, New Lexington. Ina 100 SECOND PRIZES . 100 FOURTH PRIZES 0
.~ ,
TO. lt.WAMN!D
TO M AWMDIO
t
. ....
two-car· collision on Ohio 13 In
HTOFLUOGAOf
cut:DF
·
t
••
Perry County .
.
Physicals for girls participating athletics and cheer leading at
• •
100 THIAO PRIZES
cocA.eou _ . . . •
A
Bryan : Samuel R. Wortz, 62,
Southern High School and Southern :Junior High will be given 6
ro••w.-o
100 Ft"H PiltZ!$
:
W11111d
COCA-coLA
TO. AW......O
I
~, . . ,.,...._ ,....,... s..rt C..........,._......,., ...... ..__ '• .... r•L-.CA
Quincy, Mich .. lri a car•plckup
··~
p.m:tonight (Monday) and Tuesday night at 6. p.m. Physicals
COOLIII aAG ·
COCA.COU. T·IIWIT
truck
crash
on
U.S.
20
In
Williams
will be given in the high school C&lt;!feterla.
... - - . . -illlil-- County.
'
I "Clip this coupon. SH sto,.
Zanesville: Michael J . Thomp·
for rules •nd det•lla."
NATIONAl:. WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 7·28-87
son, 33, Zimesvllle, In a one·car
accident on Ohio 93 In MusklnNAME
gumCounty.
.
Saturday
ADDRESS
~~-...,f'~t
Wooster: Michael J. Wirth, 23,
')
51 Wooster, In a two,vehicle co IIi·
slon on Ohio 83in Wayne County.
CITY
~e---:.JKI!III""60 .Newark :· Eric N. Cheeseman.
~i:r~~,£.-'i16, Newark, lit a orie:car crash on
STATE
a Licking County road. ·
Columbus: Bart A. Hlilerlch.
22, Columbus, In a one·car
acCident on a Franklin County
road.
Cleveland: Edward . C. We·
,gryn, 61, Cleveland, In a t.wo·car
mishap ona Cleveland street,
Friday night
Springfield: Danny T. Griffin,
25, Miamisburg, when he was hit
by four ears as he walked along
Interstate 70 In Clark County.

Ohio Lottery

Tigers
close·in
on ·Yanks

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November In news accounts
originating In the Middle East.
U.S. law rpqulres Congress 10 be
told of covert opera! Ions In a
"timely fashion ."
"There was no desire or plan TO
keep this matte r from the Congress,' ' Meese a rgued . . " There
was simply a recognition that
this was a highly sensitive
activity a nd that human lives
were · at s lake ~ Ihe lives of
American hostages and the lives
of the more pragmatic Lra nlan
elemen ts who were willing to
attempt a relatio nship wit h the
United States."
At a White House meeting Jan.
7, 1986, he recalled a discussion
"of the necessity of notifying .
Congress and the legality of
delaying that notification, " bu.f
no one argued In favor of alerting
Congress quickly .
Ten days later as Reagan
signed the finding, Meese said, "I
concurred with the CIA's advice
that notification lo Congress
could, In the circumstances. 'be ,
postponed due to the Imminent
danger. "
He added, "Indeed, I was not
even kept advised of the Iranian
. Initiative after rendering advice
In January or 1986. :·
Meese, who announced Nov. 25
that his Justice Department had
learned . profits frpm the Iran
deals had · been diverted to
Nicaraguan ·Contra rebels, told
the committees he hada "limited
role in tlie events of the period . "
He did not directly address ·
allegations that, · knowingly or
110t, he aided a cover·up becallse
the eonduct of the· initial probe

--~-41-·--------·- ------:- -· - - "· ·----

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Stat e
agencies plan to begin collaborlil lng for better services to
16,229 Ohio children who receiv e
out-of-home care beci!use they ·
are poor, mentally ill or
incorrlglble.
" If we are interested in child·
ren ret urning to their homes, it
behooves us to start working In
. more effective ways, " Patricia
Barry, director of the Ohio
Department of H.uman Services,
said at a joint press. conference
Monday.
"It's pretty apparent tliat
we' ve got to do something to
combin e qur resources," added
Geno · Natalucci-Persichettl, director of the Ohio ~epartment of

Youth Services.
Also participating were Martha B. Knisley. deputy director of
the Ohio Department of Mental
Health, and Betty Macintosh,
·chief of ear ly child hood and
school-age programs for the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation and Deve lopmenta l
Disabilities .
They satd the problems of
poverty, mental illness , retarda·
tion. a nd juvenile delinquency
crass agency lines . A person
could get one problem solved and
acquire another without any kind.
of a comprehensive solution, the
directors said.
In add ition. noted Pe r~ic he tti.
the problems may affect the
family as much as the troubled
individual.

"We need a system of care for
children and their families," said
Knisley. ''We ha ve to systemati ·
cally deal with this."
Barry said her agency, which
deals with welfare, has more
children with mental health
problems than I he Depart !)lent of
Mental Health and more troubled
childreQ sen! to her agency by the
courts than are committed to the
youth det ention centers.
Persic~etti said he is asking
the Ohio Supreme Court and the
Ohio Association of Juvenile and
Family Court Judges to examine
the system of referrals.
Knisley said agencies need to
be .more flexible in delivering
services to 1roubled (amllies ,.
perhaps by offering respite care
or extending hours of operation .

Heat wave · affect~ crops

GRANTED IMMUNITY Robert Owen, who testified
before the Iran-Contra panel
. May ·19, lias been granted
limited Immunity by a federal
fudge at the request of special
prosecutor Lawrence Walsh,
sources say. Owen carried
cash to the Ctintgras for U.
Col. Oliver North. ( UPl)
Nov. 21·23 allowed Lt. Col. Oliver
North, the National Security
Cou ncil aide who oversaw the
diversion, to alter and destroy
potentil,ll evidence even after
beln·g confronted.
Tough questions were ex.
peeled for Meese on that pPint,
including his decision to conduct
the weeilend Inquiry with close
po)lltlcal aides, not experienced
criminal Investigators. Meese,
arguing there was no evidence of
crlmlnaiity,dtd notbrlngtheFBI
·Into the Investigation - and ·
North's office was not se.aled until Nov. 26, a day after the
Continued on page llf'

COLUMBUS, . Ohio (UPl) The · recE'nt hot a11d humid
weather has begun to lake Its toll
on the sta te's farming Industry.
lhe Ohio Agricultural Statistics
Service reported Monday;
Livestock showed signs of
st ress, growth of some crops was
reported at a standstill and
pasture land · turned brown durIng the week ended Sunday, the
service said.
Milk production on dairy farms
was below normal and weight
gain· was slowed In beef cattle
last week because of the heat .
AlSo, pastures were reportted
short in muen of the southeast
and across the state pastures
were rated only fair to good.
The lack of rain coupled with
the high temperatures also Io·
wered ·soil moisture in many
areas.
Soybean blooming was occur·
ring on 90 percent of the state.' s
acreage and 46 perce nt . of the
crop was setting pods. Some
reporters indicated crop growth
was at a standstill because of the
heat.
Winter wheat combining
reached 99 petcent complete as
farmers In the northeast virtu-·
ally wound up their harvest. Oat
harvesting continued In full
swing last week, reaching 64
percent complete.
The second cutting of alfalfa
reached 75 percent complete
statew·ide. with a serious prob- .
. !em · of potato leaf hoppers
reported. Tobacco topping got
· und~r W&lt;IY. an!l a problem with
aphids was reported.
Soil D!ojsture statewide was

.... .,.

rated at 37 percent short , 62
percent adequate and 1 .percenl
surplus at the end of the week. ··
One week earli er, the percen·
tages were 7 percent short , 77
percent ad equate and 16 percent
surplus.
Farmers who . were able to
stand the heat and· humidity had
ample oppPrtunlty to comp'let&lt;'
field work, as 6.9 days were

COOLING OFF - One way to beal New Orleans' 90 degree
temperature Ill shown 1111 llreflghleer Buleb Bubeck lakes a bath
alter fighting a three alarm !Ire. The South Is still gripped by a beat
~ave with near record temperatures. (Ul&gt;I) ·
.'fl·

'

suitable during the period . ActivIties included wheat and oat
combi ning, hay baling, spraying,
cultivating and picking ofvegeta·
,bles and fruit .
Corn silking was reported on 76.
percent of the corp, compared
with S:l perceiJI las\ year and a
five·year average of 59 perce nt.
Tne high temperatures helped to
shorten the pollination period.

�. 'I.

Commentary
L

The Daily Sentinel

.

,,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~J:b

.
.... ,,.......,.c:::~,
...

ts:m~ ~..._
~
..

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
'Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER ofThC' Un ited P rf's s lntrrnatio nal, Inl and Daily Prf's.~
and the A mrr ican Nr wspfl prr Publls h('r s A ssoc\a1ion .

A~soc ia tion

LEITERS OF o P rN IOf'.: ;l!'f' ~n'I CO mf'. Th f'.' should IX' l&lt;'S!' tha n 300 word :long. All 1£&gt;ttC'rs p rf' ~ u bj £' C' I to f'll il lng and mu st b(• s iJ?Il t11 with na nw. ~dd rf' !'S nnd
tc&gt;lt'Ph(ln (' num ber _ No u h~ignC'd lf"tl f'r !' wil l bl' puhl is hNL Li'tl £' r.~ .&lt;:hould bP In
S;l:Q.Nl t;~sh •, ;Hid rPss i n~ issue~. no\ pf'n ;(]n a lllie&gt;s . ·
·

The hard of .
Ceniral America
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON - Quotations from the classics perhaps make it
inevitable that congressional Iran -Contra investigators call William
Shakespeare as a witness.
. The "Immortal Bard" may not know a thing about smoking guns
but, as has been proven by his plays and sonnets, he does have a way
with words.
Following js my impression of how the partial tran~crlpt of
Shakespeare's tf"Stimony might read If elfcited by Arthur Liman, one
of the joint committee's counsels.
Q. Mr. Shakespeare, what do you have to say about your attorney's
interruptions and objections?
A. "In these nice sharp quillets of the iaw, good faith, I am no wiser
than a daw. The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers."
Q. That homicide might be impractical, sir, seeing as how it would
Include me and several committee members. Would you describe the
mood of the National Security Council when you first went to the
White House?
A. "An age of discord and continued strife. Hung be the heavens
with black."
Q. I see. An earlier witness. Lt . Col. Oliver North, gave some of us
the notion that he was claiming a monopoly on patriotism and
herol~m. Would you care to comment on that?
·
A. "Glory is like a circle In the water, which never ceaseth to
enlarge itself, till by broad spread.Ing it disperses to nougth."
Q. Nicely put, sir. I couldn 't have said it better myself, legal
training and all. And what of North's former superior, Adm. John
Poindexter 9 ·
A. "Sometimes hath the brightest day a cloud. Chok'd with
ambition of the meaner sort."
Q. .My sentiments exactly , Do you agree that Poindexter had
nothing to apologize for and cou ld leave the hearing with head held
high?
' '
A, "Small things make base men proud ."
Q. How would you characterize the fund -raising technique of
another previous witness, Albert Hakim?
A. "Agrees not with the leanness of his purse."
Q. We are here to talk philosophy, not finances. There is a move
afoot to partlon both North and Poindexter, who are being
investigated for criminal behavior by a special council. Do you agree
with that?
'
··A. "What makes robbers bold but too much lenity? I will make it
felony to drink small beer."
Q. You do and you'll soon wear out your welcome by Congress . May
we assume, then, ·that you had nothing to do with formulating an
arms-for: hostages policy in Iran or diverting funds to anti-Sandinisla
forces in Central America?
A. "Every cloud engenders not a storm ."
Q. What was President Reagan' s role?
.
A "Delays have dangerous ends . A ii)tie fire Is quickly trodden out;
which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench."
Q. So the president is essentially blameless'?
A. "What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted!"
Q. Thank you for your testimony , Mr. Shakespeare. You are
excused as a witness.
A. '"Tis not my speeches that you dislike. but ' tis my presence that
doth trouble ye."

After-tax income down
WASHINGTON- America ns' aft.e r-tax income shrank 0.1 percent
in June as taxes took a bigger chunk of earnings. the Commerce
Department said Monda y.
Pre-tax income rose 0.4 percent in June to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of $.3. 73 trillion alter having gone up 0.5 percent each of
the preceding two monihs, the government said . Such a rate shows
what a year's worth of income would be if every month were like June
and seasonal fa~tors did not count.
It said personal income rose $13 .2 billion last month, $8 billion of it
from higher wages and salaries. Farm proprietors' income, !rom
subsidy payments and their own crop sales, went up $2 .9 billion.
Those gai ns were overwhelmed by a $16.9 billion Increase in
personal tax and non -1ax payments, res ulting· in a $3.2 billion cut in
disposable Income. th e Comme rce Depa rtment said. It credited the
Increase to federal tax cha nges that res uiled in higher taxes on the
federal, state and local levels.
Americans spent at an annual rate of $3.05 trillion in June, leaving
$122.3 billion to save. That's a savings rate of 3.9 percent," slightly
1\Jgher than the average since March.
The government also rev ised its personal income estimates since
1984 in light of new Information It has collected from annual surveys.
The c hanges showed Americans made slightly less money in 1984seeing their personal Income grow 9.5 percent instead of the
previously reported 9.6 percent - but earned more cash than had
. been thought in 1985 and 1986.
The new 198.5 estimate shows 7 percent growth In personal income,
up from the previously estimated 6.6 percent, while the 1986 figure
was raised to 6.2 percent. up from 5.2 percent.

T~ay

'

Page-2-The Daily SentiOet
I Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 28. 1987
'

'

Fanners
harvest
.

cash~..___Ja_ck_A_n-,-d_er_so_n_'a_n_d_D_al_e_~_an_A_t_ta

'

WASHINGTON -Uncle Sam the farm or the crop harvested.
is playing ·s ugar daddy for
Vario11s unforseen factors tho1,1sands of " farmers" who . Increased lier-acre yields, higher ·
never plow a filrrow, but culti- · grain prices and cheaper loan
vate Agriculture Department rates- combined to Increase the
programs for the sole purpose of number of farmers who qualify
harvesting subsidies .
for the $50.000 maximum, or
One of these bureaucratically close to it . Slightly more than
blessed cash crops is the " defi- 4,000 farmers received $40,000 or
ciency payment program," de- more in defiCiency payments in
signed to keep prices that 1983; almost 38.000 did In 1986.
farmers get for their produce at a And the govern nt's total exr easonable level. It's based on penditure unde t
program
the idea that farmers may need ballooned from ju over $200
federal subsidies to keep bo\)y million In 1983
o $1,4 billion
and soul together, and the in 1985.
payments are calculated by the
Unfortuna
, this dra matic
price of the crop and the .volume Increase In e deficiency proproduced.
gram's cost was not just the
· To keep agribusiness corpora- result of Innocent miscalculation s and big farmers from
tion. Widespread chiseling has
cashing In, the government set a played an important part.
maximum amo~nt that any
A recent report by the Agricul farmer could collect In a year:
ture Department"s in.s pecior gen$50,000, regardless of the size of

DELTA AIR LINES

alPS, W~N(;

STRIP.

I

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Howard RA:&gt;dney Edwards gained the
nickname "Doc" when he served
In the U.S. Navy Medical Corps in
the mid- 1950s.
Two weeks ago, Edwards was
elevated to "Interim manager"
of the Cleveland Indians and
asked to heal a patient that was In
a sickly state after being given a
pre-season bill of good health.
The chances are strong Edwards' tenure as manager wlil
· end with the 1987 season. The
odds of him sticking are further
reduced because the Indian front
office believes the team can win
with Its cu.r rent personneL
Doc Edwards, heal thyself. No
help will be forthcoming from
' your employers.
Cleveland has lost eight of l1
games since Edw.ards replaced
the fired Pat Corrales on July 16.
Edw&amp;rds has reinforced the
respect the players .gave him
when hew as a coach but that has
not translated into victories.
The pitching, with few excep·tions, remains weak, with - an
ERA fluctuating between 5.00
and 6.00. The team hitting, which
provided the best average In the
American League las t year, only
occasionally fs timely and has
been about 40 points lower than
the .284 of last year. The defense
features two rookies up the
middle, with center fielder Brett
But ler providing the only expe-

er a! concluded that more than saw Instances where farm
one In every five farmer~ who _owners broke up their operations
received deficiency payments by renting their land'to Investors
who leased equipment, hired
weren' t entitled to them.
"In all ," the internal report _ labor and used s1,1rrogate manag'
states, "the questione\1 pay- ers to operate the farm ."
Thes!O' gentlemen in designer
ments amounted to about $]5. 7
million to 225 persons of 1,059 jeans, like the !Illes of the field ,
tested - or a 21 percent error toiled not. They only reaped .
''The Individual investors who
rate."
supplied
only financing fpr the
The General Accounting Ofoperation
are each entitled to a
fice, which has also been looking
$50,000
payment,"
the GAO audiinto the situation, offered a
tors
pointed
out,
adding: "In
startling ·projection based on the
some
cases;
this
financing
was
growing number of farmers who
obtained
by
using
either
crop
or
are collecting the maximum
the
government
payment
as
$50,000 payment. If the trend
continues, the GAO auditors collateral. "
Consider this scheme used &lt;In
reckoned, the cumulative cost
for 1984-1989 would be about $2.3 California. A subsidiary leased
billion - with some $900 million some 6.660 acres from its parent
company and hired a manageof that added In 1989 alone.
As for the cheaters . another ment firm to run the farm. It was
GAO study had this to say: "We entitled to a .$50.,000 maximum
deficiency paymen·t.
Instead . the subsidiary leased
the land to the management
company, which subdivided it
into 238-acre parcels. the min Imum acreage that qualifies for
the ma ximum $50,000 deficiency
payme nt for lrril!at~d cotton
land . The minimum parcels were
then leased to 28 investors- who
e ach qualified for $50,000 defi c iency payment s.
The total federal payment thus
1.,1&lt;::::: ~I /ilo..
grew
from the original S50.000 to
.,
$1.4 m.lllion . And since the
investors . had secured loans
based on the guaranteed sale of
the cotton crop and liad qualified
in advance for the deficiency
payment ; they probably didn't
have to put up a penny of their
own money .
Sen . Tom Harkin, D-lowa , Is
und&lt;:'rstandably upset that there
has been not a single successful
prosrcution of these sche mes,
des pit&lt;' the !act that the Agricul ture IX&gt;partment and Investigations will beRtn hearings on _th r
problem this week.

"••"a"•'' •••

PEANUTS

Making motherhood

Trio face off in
,.U.S. Women's Open

during douhl e steal during first inning action 1
E DISON , N.J. (l}Pl i
Monday . Clark was out at second. The Dodgers
JoAnne Carner, Ayako Okamoto
won, 6-5. (liP I)
a nd Laura Davies - represent ing the past, present and future of
womf'n's golf- m eet to decide In
90 holes what !hey failed to settle
reCPiver Ricky Na ill I and Buf· in 72 at the Wom en's U.S. Open.
" Last yea r , I too k lim r away
PL E ASA NTVIL LE. N. Y .
fal o co rn erback Na te Odo m esTh e trio face off today in the
(UPI ) - Th e New York Gia nt s fro m ~o rn e-. vetrran dr ff' nstvr
lhC pla yers picked hl'forf. and fir s t three-wa y playoff in the
playe
rs
late
in
cJ
mp
l:ol'
ca
usc
the
Mond ay ope n•'&lt;! !ra ining ca mp
a fte r Tngram .
42-year history of the championwif h Jl of their 14 d ra ft picks rooki es just got her e. That wa&gt;
Whit e reportedl y si!&lt;ned a ship. The playoff and a thunderre
trospcctivrly
a
m
is
tak
e:
but
a1
sig n('(l in lhrlr qu es t. to beco me
fou r -year co nt r a c t w o rth s torm that suspended play Sunlhe fir st NfL tcnm to •·c•peat as tti P !imP i ff'lt I htld no choice ."
day combined to make this the
~RSO
. OOO
ThP, Giants' top fdu1' picks Su'p er fl owi c-hampions in ri g hl
Pa
rcel
ls
sa
id
the
1~86
r
ookies
first Open to be decided iis lalea o
wide rece ivc1's In gra m, Ste phen
vr ars.
were
hurl
by
mi
ss
ing
time
and
it
Tuesday.
·
· Quarterback Phil Simms. hl.'ro Bake r of F r!:'s no Sta te and
will
he
lp
Ingram
to
a
rrive.as
soon
Carner
,
who
shot a 3-under 69
or the Gi ant s' :l9-20 Super Rowl Odessa Tu r nN of Nort hwe"
as
po
ss
lbi
~
.
in
Monday
's
fourth
round , OkaXXI triumph over Denvrr. said. Lo ui s ia na a nd s!:'eo nd -round
"
Do
rsey
missl'd
a
wholr
lot
moto
(72
)
a
nd
Davies
(71)
hiS team iS iooklns: toward to safe t)• Adr ia n Whit r of Florida las
t
yea
r
,"
Parcells
sa
id.
·
"
i
finished
72
holes
at
285.
Four
matc hing 'the 1979 Pilt sbu rg h will be count ed on to short:' the thought he could have been s trokes back wer e Bet sy King
c lub·~ fPw Wf'aknC'sscs .
Strolcrs as re pPat cha mpions.
involved s ix or seven w eeks a nd Jody Rosenthal with IX&gt;bble
G i a ril s C c nrr;ll M n nagf'r
'· Your 'goa ls and as pi rati ons
ear ii c r th a n he was . Ail those Massey and Deedec Robe rts at
arc different 1as defendin g Gror~:e Young unci in go·a m 's
r rookies) could have play ed a 290.
age
nt.
Dr.
Charles
Tu
cker
.
ex
c hampions) ," Si mms said. "We
mo re s ig nifica nt role ea r lier ."
Nancy Lopez, looking for the
be
In
pect
thc
wide
rccelver
10
don't want tu jus t win the Super
Til
e
Gi
ant
s
'
ea
rly
19H6
p
ic
ksmajor championship title to
only
Bo wl , we've a lready done th a t. ca mp soo n.
Dorsey,
cornerba
ck
Mark.
Colelude
her , was at 297 along with
" 'i don' l think th is is long
Wt•want to r epea t, we want to do
lins
,
linebacke
r
Pe
pper
J
o
hnson
,
amateur
Michiko Hattori.
low
it aga in , . kl't'p go ing wh at we term ," Yo,ung sa id.
Las
ker
and
nose
safety
Greg
Defending
c
hampion Jane
Tuck(•r has sa id h•• does n' t
s ta rted ."
tac
kl
e
F
~
rlk
How
a
rd
are
Gedlles.w!thdrew
Monday after
Gi ant s oac h Dill Parcel is sa id consider in gram a holdout br· rx p~c 1 ed to pus h for s t~rt ing jobs injuring her back lifting luggage.
ra use the s tdes ti r e c lose. in ~i s job will I)(&gt; eas ie1· 1n tra in ing
thi s year.
ca mp tha n last year whPn his top gr am , the 28th pick of 1he dm ft. is
''There should l:ol' som e good
expected
to
s
ign
for
bC'Iwre
n
fi ve dra ft pi c ks wrre missing a t
co mpe tition, " P arcells said. "i
S1
.274
miilion
a
nd
n
t:l7
mi
llion
lhP s tart.
can' t see an a rea where competlThe only missi ng pic k was ov&lt;'r four y••ars. Thosr arc th e ·llon s houldn ' t be good ."
firs t-round wid e r('Cc ivc r Mar k r ontracts g iven Den vN wid e
Ingram of Mi chis:an Sta te. Las t
yea r the Gia nt s ope ned ca mp
without their fir st-round and four
seco nd·round c hoices. Eric DorCOLUMBUS, Ohio t. UP I)- B ~- ~a nd returned $62, $16.40 and
. sey, the Giants ' 1986 fir st- round
pick. did not s ign until alt er the G 's Escort scored an upset $7.60.
victory in I he $1 2, 500 Good Time
Whitsend's Todd, the favorite,
fir st exhibition game .
·
s
e
ries
final
e
Monday
pacing
·"This makes It eas ier," said
wa s undefeated in three preliminary legs of th e series .
Parce lls. whose Giant s went 14- 2 ni~hl at Sc iot o Downs.
The 30-1 lo ngs hot , driven by Ed
One Life.To Giv e won the third
in the rPguiar se.a son. " You get
mor&lt;:&gt; looks at them and see wh at Greeno J r .. out duc ied a pa ir of race, ki cking off a 5-4-8 trifecta
challengers in the stretch to combination thai was wort h
~u ys ca n compete for jobs.
notch · a ha ll-length win ove r $939.20. Com~ro Lobell was seC' mon J .J . a nd Wh it send 's Todd. cond and Mystic Ace showed.
B G's Esco rt covered th e mile
A crowd of 2, 634 wagered
in
a
lifetime
bes
t
c
loc
king
of
1:58
$238.937.
Tht• J)aily Sentinel
OUT AT SECONil ..:. Dodger shortstop Dav"
Andc.-..on applle&gt; tag to Sa~ Fr:&amp;ndsco Giant Will
Clark who twl•ls his hody to try to avoid tag

has becomr. a s they say , ~
mothrrhood issue.
Or ta ke an issu~ seen to be on
the . conservative side of the
spectrum: national defens(&gt;. After World War II , America
disarmed. Bu t the Soviets were
on the move . Geopolitical
thinkers said that tM Shattered
for.;o:&gt;s of democracy would have
to be led by the United Stales .
The costs would be &lt;'normous.
What would the nay·sayers say ?
Important idea , but too cosily,
the Congress wouldn ' t approve.
impossible. Toda y we spend $300
billion a year for national defense. We don ' t spend It because
we like to but because we
perceive that we must do it.
So : Don' t say Impossible. The
record is clear. Democratic
peoples can do what thry think it
is necessary to do.
Now an idea Is s urfac ing, and
not just in my book to be sure, to
make motherhood a motherhood
lssul". It may not happen, buill It
doesn' t , it won;t be bec ause It
ca n't happen . Wat ch thi s spa ce
lor de tails.

Giants prepare to defend Super Bowl title

,
1

A star .fades in Mississippi_.~__R_ob_er_t_~_al_ter_s
JACKSON, Miss. (NEA ) been entrenched ill office for two
Mabus Is expected to fini sh but e njoys a re putalion as a
One year ago, Mississippi Audi - decades. Then, Mabus set about first among the eight contenders hard -working, no-nonsense pubtor Ray Mabus was the toasi of fui!Hilng his 1983 campaign in the Aug . 4 Democralive
this slate's voters and a n emerg- promise " to clean up poli!icai primary , but nobody believes he lic official who opened stat e
governmen t to blacks when he
Ing cel&lt;'brity in national politics.
corruption in Mississippi.., ·
, will rec&lt;'ive a majority, which-he served a·s governor from 1972 to
The Wall Street Journal deOpportunities were hardly needs to avoid an .Aug. 25 runoff 1976.
.
voted front-page space to a
lacking. Audits of state depart - against the second-place fin Most
politiC&lt;Ii
observers
beflattering account 61 Mabus's ments and agencies were four isher, likely to be former Gov.
llev&lt;'
Waller
will
handily
win
a
good-gover nment crusade, E s- years delinquent. Many of the Bill Waller.
runoff against Mabus, then will
quire maga zine included hi(ll in
state's 82 counties had incompreWaller, who has shown surpris- face Tupelo businessman Jack
its list of "Achievers Under 40,"
henslve accounting system s that ·ing strength in the Closing weeks Reed, an attractive and progres- ,
and U.S. News &amp; World Report
served principally to obscure of the campaif(n , looks and talks sive Republican , in the Noplaced him on an equally select · local political graft.
like a stereotypical "redneck "
vember general election.
list of rising ·political stars.
Cleaning up the corruption
Mabus sought to parlay that
required a n unprecedented at acc laim into a successful bid for
tack upon the values, traditions
governor of Mississippi - but and practices .of the "good ol'
today, on the eve of the first vote boys'' networks that controlled
in the gubernatorial race, his power in many county
popularity appears to have" decourthouses.
clined and he is fighting for his
Ignoring warnings that he
political life.
·
would disturb those arrangeSotne of those who have come ments at his own peril, the brash
to know ' Mabus during the young (he is now 38) Mabus
campaign c haracterize him as recovered more than $1.5 million
an aloof , distant man uncomfor- in misused money , has claims
table with others: Journalists pending for $2 million more and
complain Mabus's staff has unn e- has established new standards
cessarily Isolated him from the for honesty and accouniablllty In
news media . Some voters who Mississippi politics . '
earlier lauded his reforms now
Although Mabuswas limited to
view Mabus as just another filing civil complaints against
self-serving politician .
wayward public officials, an
Mabus may yet emerge victor- Independent, parallel probe conious in the three elections he ducted by the FBI has produced
0
must.wln II) the coming months to criminal indictments of 36 super0
attain the governorship, but his visors In 21 counties on charges of
tro1,1bled odyssey Illustrates the bribery, extortion, mall fraud
vlclsslludes of contemporary and conspiracy. Almost half of
politics.
those charged already have
Although the_offices of lieuten- pleaded guilty.
ant governor and attorney genAlong the way, however, some
eral are the traditional stepping- voters began to view Mabus'
s tones to the governorship In operations as more of a cynical
almost &lt;ill states, Mabus relied political prominence than a se·
;=upon the auditor's post to propel rlous attempt \O Improve governhimself lntq contention for the ment. Others complained that
-~
state's highest elective office.
after running out of legitimate
~
.· .. • •
..,11111110 HEA. Irx: · .
Mabus first defeated the heir targets Mabus resorted to pet.ty
apparent to the a11d1tor who had attacks. ,

By United Pre&gt;~s International
Today is Tuesday, .Jui~i :!8, the 209th day of 1987 with 156 to follow.
The. moon is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening ·s tars are Mars' and Saturn.
Those bOrn on this dat'e are under the sign of Leo. They lncluqe
surrealist.artisl Mar~el Duchamp In 1887, comedian Joe E. Brown In
1892. singer-actor Rudy Vallee in 1901, 'composer Rlch;~rd Rodgers
1"Oklahoma~ " "South Parific" 1 in 190'1. former first lady Jacqueline
·Kennedy Onassis in 1929 (age 581, ballet dancer-choreographer
Jacques D'Amboise In l934 (age 531. dance band leader Peter JJ'uchln
In 1937 tage 50), former pro basketball player Sen. Bill Bradley of
New Jersey In 1943 tage 441. actress Sally Struthers In 1948 (age 391,
and baseball pitcher Vida Blue in 1949 (age 38).
On this date in history:
· r.
.
In 1914, Austria declared war on Serb,!a , marking the start of World
War I.
In 1945, the U.S. Senat~ ratified the United Natlo!ls charter by a vote
of 89-2. An Army B-25 b&lt;&gt;m~r lost in fog crashed Into the side of the
Empire State Building In New York City, killing' 13 people.

I

\

Bengals sign No. 2
pick, Eric Thomas
CINCI NNATJ tUPl J - Th e
Cincinnati Bengals sig ned their
No. 2 draft choice Monday,
leaving the .ciub's top draft pick
unsigned, team officials sa id
Monday night.
'
Eric Thomas , a cornerback
from Tulane. signed his contract
Monday and reported to rooki e
camp with 34 other first - year
pia y.ers and 14 veteran s.
The rest of thP veterans are to
be in camp by Thursday night
with the fir st full -team workout
Friday morning.
'
The Den gals are stili trying to
s ign top draft choice Jason Buck.
a defens ive Pnd from Brigham

531 JACKSON PIKE:RT.35 WEST

Phono446-4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT/SUN &amp;WED
ALL SEATS $2.75 1
A~ISSION EVERY TU(SOAY lZ. 75·

L

oiULY 24 thru 30_j
FRIDAY thru THUP.SOAV!

·suMMER
SCHOOL"

IIJII ll.IJI(!\

"JAWS THE

REVENGE "

Young U nive r s it y.

3·00 Gallons of Gas

•

Normal /Installation

I[ ISPS 11 $--fUjll.

\ l)h•lslnn of Mulllnwdl:&amp;,

In~ '.

'
~'' '1 ' 1'' '

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llu 'noL! h F' rld ,l \'. Il l C'1lUr! ~ 1 .. Pn

nwro\-, (lh \(1 , hv lhr Ohln \' ; I ll &lt;·~ Puh·
ll!i h i n ~: . lm n1l: ~n y Mulilm Ni iu. lnr ..
p (,m r•r'll\ fJ hln 4;,TH!I , P h. ! ~ ~ · :!. 1 ~ 1; _ ~ ~ ·
(· nn e! cl.1~s J)(lo; f:H!f ' p.dd ;11 P l\ 011'1'fl,\ ,

Ohio.
Mt' mtwr" l 'n \11 '&lt; 1 P n·"~ lnt l•r n : 1 t l o n~ l.
In I. •nd D J i l ~· P l'f'SS A ~~rwl o tl ln n ;md 1hr
Oh •o N&lt;· ~~·s pa pf' r A.~!int iat ln n . ~;11 1ona \
Ad \ 'l' t'!\!; 1111-l R I'IJfPl't ' nl :•lh'l'. RI'U11h:rm
Nf' W!'olhi)X'I S;l i('"; 7:t1 1'h'.!' ' " ' '(' niH '.
NN~ Ynrk . Nr-w '11tjlc 1001 1
Pt1ST:'vi ~STE R :

St•nd a1 ldr·f·"i'l t · h : •n ~ ~ ~
10 ·nw [l;r \1\' Sl •nt lrwl. 11 1 Cnurl ~~ ..
Pomf'rn~·. Otlio 4a7\i!l,

NOW EVERYBODY
IS TRYIN' TO BE liKE
SPUD McKENZIE.

.

· WORKS UP SWEAT- New York Fullback Roger Vlck, the Jets
top pick, works up a sweat as he practices during opening day of
· training Monday at Hofstra. (UP I)

BG's scores upset win at Scioto Downs

Berry's World

'

Thornton and ~ Is gentle s pirit
wi)l understand his reluctance to
criticize. Still , even he is wo ndering what has happened.
What ha s happened Is the team ·
- aft er a su rpris ing 84-78 mar k
.last year and high hopes in sprin g
- Is in last place In the AL Eas t at
34-!Jil, the major s' worst record .
The players believe they have
been shortchanged, In a sense, by
the media,. They say it was beat
writers, not the players and not
the fans, that participated in two
national magazine polls tha t
caused Cleveland to . be na m ed
the AL East favori te.

Yet, Edwards remains positive . He says the Indians can be
competitive a nd cites teamwork
as the key. That Is commendable.
Edwards can start instilling a
more positive attitude with one
s troke of his pencil on the lineup
,;ard - by writing in Andre

•
ISSUeS
___B_en____,W_a_u_en_b_e_rg_

problem and Wattenberg is a
the elderly would be a good Idea .
doli . Fair enough ; It's a co(llpli- the nay-sayer.s mil!ht have said,
cated a nd controversial issue . II
but It 's too expensive. the Congr&lt;&gt;s s won ' t lund it , ihe vot er s
doitswanttocallmeadolt. l ean
live with it : after ali, I'm not one
won't want to pay the I aXE'S for II
of those thin-skinned authors.
- it 's politically Impossible ..
It Is another sort of criticism
Today - surprise~ - we SJX'nd
that bothers me. Yes. some over $200 billion a year on Social
cri1ics say, there is· a problem;
Security, and congress P..rsons
yes. it would be goo&lt;:t to do go into tantrums if II is suggested
something about it; but - ah that benefit increases should '!!O
it's too expensive, the Con!!ress up less quickly . What happened ?
will never vol e for it. it's Voters were alerted to a real
impossible.
proble m - elderly povert y I ask you to forget the merits of
and rt&gt;sponded in a dece nt way ,
the argument ; forget whether
Turn the hands of the clock
pro-natal government policies ahead to the early 1960s. Rachel
are needed. Concentrat e on that · Carson writes a book called Sif,.,,
word "impossible " as used by Swi"#· She maintains that our
the nay -sayers. What does it say•
envirQnmentls being poisoned. It
That even If we recognize a
is clear that , over lime, II will
problem. we free people can ' t act cost many hundred s of billions of
to dea\ with it. Dlsiilled, it is a
public and priva te dollars to
view that s a ys de m oc ra cy clean up. What would the naydoesn't work. But it does. And savers think about that ? Good
people who sa y it doesn't, or idea. but too cos tly, the Congress
can't , don't under s ta nd th e · wlil never approve it. It 's impossituation .
sible. But toda y poillicians fall
Cons ider : Back in the 1930s, a ll over them selves to spend
the idea of a Soc ia l. Securit y more to do environmental !!OOd
system wa s ra ised . Pensions lor
things . Why• Th e envtronment

Thornton's name.
Thornton Is on a sort of
"involuntarily retired" list, the
24th man on what ha s become a
23-player roster. He has played in
just 31 of the Indians' first 98
games and has 72 at -bats.
The front office has more than
hinted Thornton, th e regula r
designate hitter last year, Is
· washed up. This Is extraordinarily shabby treatment of the ma n
who easily has been Cleveland's
best player and a clubhouse
leader the last dec ade.
Thornton will not go gently in.to
retirement, though he is being
pushed. Anybody familiar with

rience and sure hands.

-

,;::;:)
I have found the way to
separate people who understand
American politics from those
who don ' t. Those who don ' t'
understand our politics use the
word "impossible. "
Consider: A book of mine ha s
recently been published called
T/,., Bir1h Dearlh (Pharos Books ).
Its theme is elementa l: People In
the United .States and t he whoie
modern Weste.rn world are havIng children at well below th!'
r ates necessary to keep a population from declining over an
extended period of time. I think
that such very low fertility rates
can harm us economically, geopolitically and personally . I recommend in the book that action
be taken , some of it governmental, to make II financially eas ier
for young people to have children . Among thE' ideas I discuss
are higher standard tax. exemptions for children , child allowan ces, paid mat E'r.nily leave. day
care and forgiving some repaymE'nt of college loans for those
who are having children.
SomE' of my critics have said
low birth rates are not really a

Edwards may not get any
help from Cleveland brass

THE TROUBLE IS

ip history

The Daily Seritinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Continue efforts to form midget league
By ,Jim Soulsby
Efforts arc continuing to form
a Midget Football program for
fifth and s ixth grade youngs ter s
In thP Meigs County area. Surrounding counties have initiated
this program with apparent
success a nd If one were formed in
our area an at tempt would be
made to sc h&lt;:&gt;dule the.,e team s.

An initial sign up has r esulted
in ihe regi stering or some 22
pi'Ospective players but · those
planning the program would like
more participation . A meeting
will be held at the Cleland Realty
Company at 6:00p.m this evening regarding this program . All
interest€'d partie' are urged to
attend . ·

8\' ('urrh•r or Motor Routt•

·on&lt;' Yrar ............. :......... .......... $1-i!'i.On

PRtfE

. Da i l~ · .....

..... ................. :!!'1 C'r&gt;nl fl

Subsr rii~Ys not d r~ t r· ln J.! 10 pay I hC' l';l r ·

df'r m av n•mlt In :rd,·;Jn('f' llirf'ct 10
Thf' Ottli v ~nztnrl on 'll :l, tl or 12 m onth
Ous ls. CI:P(\ It wll ll&gt;e j!\VC' n c-a r r\C'r C'a c- h
No !&gt;ubs&lt;"riptlon s b~· m lJil p4•rmiHNI In

nrC'aS Wh('l'(' hOffi('

COIIT\('f

Sf'fVI C'l' is

:.1' '"'\labil.'.

Mall SutMtrlpliDII!II

lmdde

'

'

Mf'l~

County

u w...... K,. ............... ................... $17 .;:

26 Wcek~ ....... .......... .. ... ............ $.'¥1 .
~2
ks ........... ........ : .. ............ $66.56
OutAide MelkS County
1~ Woeks, ,... .. ....................,....... ll~ . 20

w('...

26 WN•k!) , ,,·., .. .. .. .... ........... ... ...... $35.10

a2 w.,.k, ...................... ......... ...167.00
j;

Richmond edges Tidewater nine, 5-3
Pres.~ International
Sal D'Aiessandro went 3 for 4
and drove in a run, and Mike
Fischiln hit an RBI doubl~ ln the
sixth inning Monday night to give
the Richmond Braves a 5-3
International League victory
over Tidewater, the Tides' sixth
s tralght loss.
• Marty Clary, 9-6, pitched seven
innings to earn his sevedth
triumph 1n his last eight outings.
Clary also added an RBI. Juan
Eichelberger recorded his fifth
save. Bob Gibson, 7-6, suffered
tho:&gt; loss.
·
Mark Carreon led · the Tides'

By United

SINGI.E COP\'

--

·- ...

·'

offense with two singles and two
doubles in four plate appearan- ,
1
ces. Carreon also added two RBI.
In the only other game, Columbus blanked Toledo 3-0.
At Columbus, Ohio, Bill Fulton
and Steve Frey combined on a
seven-hitter to pace the Clippers.
Fulton Improved to 6-5. ;.Frey
pitched the ninth for his fifth
save. Don Heinkel, 7-7, took the
loss. Randy Belarde hit a solo
homer In the fourth Inning for
Columbus, .The Clippers' victory
and Tidewater's loss moved
Columbus Into first place.

~~I

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

675-1700

-

PETJIOlAN(

Sl iBSf'KII'TION Ui\TJo: !o\
Ont• Y/PPk ....... .... ..................... $ 1 . 2~
Onr Mon1h .,,;,. .... 1....... -....... . ...... $~'1. -1 5

''SPECIAL SUMMER PRICE"

-

LP. GAS

00
$298.
20 ·ft. of Copper
Rent Free Tanks

22 years of dependable service. In the Mason,
Gallia, Meigs County area.
•

SALE ENDS SEPT. 1, 1987

CITY ICE &amp;·FUEL CO.
. 62 ·North--P oint Pleasant

'Phone

Alii far K41111y Prodemore
Drivers: Jcnlti' ..me~~ &amp;

Meaige

'"
•

�28. 1987

Tuesday.

Ohio

Twins edge Mariners;. Tigers
move within half-game of NY
By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
That save next to Jeff Reardon' s name In the box score
rightfully belongs to Kirby
Puckett.
Puc)lett preserved Minnesota's 4-3 victory over the Mariners
Monday nl~ht by throwing out
the potential tying run at the
plate to end the game.
After Steve Lombardozz l and
Gar y Gaettl hit hom!' runs In the
ninth to put the Twins ahead.
RPardon started the bottom of
the Inning and rl'tlred the first
two batters. Needing only one
more out for his 21st sav e,
Reardon yielded a double off the
left -center field wall to Dave
Valle.
Rey Quinones then hit a sharp,
one-hop single to center and
Puckett, who was play ing· shallow , charged the ball and threw
Valle out at the plat e by a wide
margin
"I wanted to hlt th e cutoff
man, " said-Puckett. who made a
perfect throw to catcher Tim
Laudner. " Th at' s m y job."
Seattle Man ager Dick Willi·
ams said heconsldPred r epla cing
Valle with a pinch runner .
" It would havp been Mike
Kingery and that could hav£'
made it two steps closer ,"
Williams said. " HI' was out by.
what , fou r steps? T he hit was
r op£0 and the throw was a st r ike. ''

•
-

By JIM SLATER

UPI Sports Writer

Browns coach says, 'no one comes
in with a job'; expect intense battles
KIRTLAND , Ohio IUPI I Cleveland Browns coa ch Marty
Schottenhelmer, looking ahead
to the team's training camp.
expects some intense battles for

star t ing positions
" As !told t·he squad !Sunday!
night . no one comes In with a
job," he said. " There will be
strong com pet ilion, bu 1 that

Scoreboard ...

•

.i

Majors

M11ln.· Ill

\\'t'dllt~.,.· "' Ga nlo'"'
I tlhtmhU:- at Klt• t.n~
l'n•tUI krt at Rlwhf"tt'r

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•

bring s ou t tn e bes t In
ev er y body."
D efensively, Schottenhel mer
said ther e will be three battles
·g oing on. righl defenstve end ,
free sa fet y and ln sidp lin£Oba c k £Or .
On offense, whir:h the head
coach said should be vas tly
improved . wide r eceiver , offen·
stve line and backup light pnd
and quarterba ck will be under
the gun.
Vet erans Sa m Cl ancy and Car l
' 'B i g Daddy " Hairston will duke
It out at ri ght defensi ve end
E ven though the two arc best of
friends. the 6 foo t-7. 270· pound
Cl ancy wlli be out to unst•a t the
12-year vet er an fr om Mary land
E as tern Shore. Hairston led the
Browns with nine sack s last yea r.
but becau se of hi s age, he's a
question mark.
The free sa fety j ob IS presently
wid!' open. Recently acquired
Tim Fox, former starter AI Gross
and Incumbent Chris Rocklns
will fight for the starting nod.
Rocklns, who led the Browns
with 135 tackles last year, Is on
the hot seat. The coaching staff
believes he does not m ake
enough big plays. C ross, who
began last season as the starling
strong safety, tore ligaments in
his knee in the season opener and
missed virtually the entire'
season.
Fox, recently signed as a free
agent for $160,&lt;XXI, was brought
Into camp to light a fire under
Rocklns. If Fox doesn' t earn a
starting job, the 33-ycar·old
probably won ' t be k ept on th&lt;&gt;
roster .
Only one thing is certain at
inside linebacker · Mike Johnson
will start at one of the two spot s..
Eddie Johnson and Anthony
Griggs _wlil compel!' for the final
spot. Don't be surprised to find
EddiP .Johnson on the bench .
"It's not a reflection of the
players at inside linebacker , if ' s
the presence of MlkP .Johnson,"
said Schottenheimer.
The S-foot&lt;1, 228-pound former
United States Football League
standout played a backup role
last year, but wi)i be handed a
starting job this season.
Mike Junkin, the first -round
pick from Duke, was still unsigned Monday, but Is supposed
to start at left outside linebacker.
At wide ri'Celver, a weaknesses
In the last few years, the Brow'ns
have corralled one of best corps
In the &lt;\FC. Reggie Langhorne
and Webster Slaughter apparently will retain their starting
spots, and Brian BrPnnan, who
hasn' t signed for '87, will be the
first reserve.
J;lehlnd Brennan wlll be Clar·
ence Weathers, who would like to
· forget last season, Canadian
Football League refugee Terry 1
Greer, speedster Clyde Duncan,
Glen Young and Gerald "Ice
Cube" McNeil.

l

INDIANAPOLIS tUPil -The
U. S. Pan America n Games basketball team will gauge how l ar il
has comt' - and how far It n£OCds
to go - when it plays the first of
three gam es against a contingent
of NBA players today at M arket
Square Arena .
" We w i ll use the ga me to see
wht'r e we ar c," sa id Pan Am
Coach Denny Crum. ,l hf' head
roac h at t he Un iver sit y of Lo uis·
ville. " Th en we will have a couplP
of days to work rea l hard on
things we didn't do vPry wei!
Until you play outside co m petl·
tion. som e thm gs you do aren't
very ev idPnt. "
The Pan A m tl'am . which w ill
have had 10 days of wor kout s
before Tuesday 's gam e. r et urn s
to It s Loulsvillt'. l&lt; y ., trai ning
camp aft er the first game
against the NBA squad T hP US
am ateurs met'! the NBA ll'a m
aga in Salurda \ at·L oul sl'llll' and
Au g. 6 at Fort Way ne. lnd .
before Pan Am co m pet It ion
begin s Aug. 9 again st Panam a.
''Wit h the short per iod of time
you have t o prac t icc. you ca n' t be
as concerned about your opponPnt as you need to be about
yourself. "
said Crum , who
- coached L ouisville to NCAA
t Illes In 1980 and 1986 and also led
a U.S. team to the 1977 World
U niversit y Carnes tltlP . .
The U.S. team . which has won
etghl of nine Pan A m bas k etball
tournamPnts , deser ves Its rol e as

a heavy Pan Am ravorltt'. ("rum
sai d.
" But a n yo n~ who t hinks there
are no good tpams out thert'
does n't understan d tht' ca l iber ol
the world t ams." h£' sai d.
In practtc&lt;•. Crum ' s tw o maj or
goa ls have been i m prm•lng dr f
enslve ski ll s and crc~tlng a
fast-brcaktng unit from pl ayrr s
accustomed to a slm''f'! pa cP
·· w~ have more quickness an&lt;i
~ l h i et lc
abi Ji tlrs !han Ol h&lt;'l'
team s," Crum satd. " Wp have a
good shooting t£Oam . hut on&lt;' t hat
Is not sel fis h I'm not co ncPI'nPd
about t he o ffcns(•. Our hlgg&lt;•st
wea kn&lt;'ss Is drfcnsc. WI' nr&lt;' d to
wor k on our p1 £Ossurf' dcfcns!'."
Leadi ng t hr Pan Arn 1&lt;•a m ts
7-foo t-1 cent N David Rollinson
w ho fi nis hed his co l i&lt;'R care&lt;·ral
Navy as t h&lt;' N\AA 's I£Oadlng shot
bi()(· kcr an d No. 10 nl l-tlmro
scorer. After thr Co me~. l h&lt;' No.
l pick i n Ia"' month's NBA dra f t
w ill ret ur n to his two~ yC'a r Naval
as slgnm f'n l at K in~ s Ray !';ubm a
rl ne Bas e In St. Man·'s. Ga .
Th e NBA uni t Includes Strve
A lford . thf' l!':~di n g seorPr from
Indiana U nlv('rslt :&lt;'s NCAA
c hampion. Alford wa s a sN'ond·
r ou nd pic.:k by Dallas .
The NBA tea m is coach£Od by
th&lt;' Ind iana Paet'rs ' J:~ c k Ram·
say. th£' l£'all1JC' s wl nn ing('St
act ive coach Chu ck PNs on, the
Pacer rorward who wa s na m ed
NBA Roo ki e Of thl' YNII', joins
Pacrrs H&lt;'rb Wi l lia m s and Scotr
Skiles on lhc l&lt;'a m r{cggl£'
Miller ,, the Pacers' fi rs t-round

By The Bend,

LOWEST. PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
*AUGHMENIS *FRONT-END, WOIII
*BlnEIIES *TilE REPAIR

Page 5

•

Codner family conducts reunton
The third annual reunion of the
Edith Eddy and Robert Henry
Codner family was held r ecently
at Forked Run State Park with 66
persons attending.
The area was decorated with
helium filled balioons with streamers on the tabies. A basket
dinner was served at 1 p.m . with
hot dogs and hamburger s fr om
the griil. Grace wa s given by the
Rev. William Hoback.
In charge o! the afternoon
program were Matt and Paula
Norman. Gam es wer e played
··
and pictures were taken.
Awarded prizes were William
Hoback , oldest attending; Nancy
Johnston, traveling the grea test
distance; St eve and Tam! Baker,
having y oungest member present~ Jim Codner family. most
original name tag; the Bob and
Elaine Sayre family ent ertained

Dodger s 6, Ghtnls 5
At Los Angeles. F rank lin Stubbs
led orr lh e 12th l nnln ~ wit h his
14th home r un Stubbs' b l asl.
dt'&lt;'P over th&lt;? r ig ht · c nter f ield
fence. ca m e off Sco tr Garrelts.
9·7. T l m Leary. w ho pitc hed one
Inning. improvcd t·o 2-li.

TUESDAY
RACINE - Work sess ions to
tear down old lootba 11 bl eacher s
has been scheduled fo r 6 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday at
Sou lhern High SchooL If raining ,
sess ions will be postpon ed until
Wedn esday and Thursday. Bring
tools.

,.

dra ft pick. a !so wi ll play .
!)(' t roll' ~ l slah T hom as. leader
of India na's 1981 NCAA c hampion. will play for th&lt;• NBA as wtl l
Ro lando Bl ackman and Rov
Tarpley from Da l las and H Ous·
ton ' s Hodn£OY M cC'ray, a f odll£Or
Louisv ill e player u nclt'r ('rum.
" I 'm going to MVl' fun out
1hNe," Robinson ~aid " ThI s Is
m y ki nd of ~ilrn(• I ' ll ha w · a lut of
chanc&lt;·s to rctlouncl il nd bi O&lt;"k
.~ hots with all those gu ys sc ram ·
t)llllg around "
Robi nson Is the only U.S.
pla ver who has eomp lcrf'd hb
NCAA eligibilit y. Pla y 1·s sud•
as 1ndlan a ·~ 0C"un Garrl"ll , al.~o tt
mrm lx"r of lhr Pan Am .squtHI.
I'Xp£0Ct 10 I&gt;&lt;' b&lt;•lt&lt;'r n~xl yNJ r fo•·
ha ving workrd with Robi nson
1his 1oo umm r r .

Old Bethel Church

Beqefit sing set at Old Bethel Church
The Old Bethel Fr!'rwlll Bap·
Chu•· h. two miles nort h of
thP rai lroad t racks In Ches hire
and behind Clibf'rrs Scrvlc&lt;'
Sl' r v l ~r St at ion on Houtp 7. wil l
bfo t hP loca 1Jon of a ben£O fll sing to
1HiS(' m oney for m atci·J;•Is for a
new fl oor . thl' F'rlda)' . ut i .30
o.m Th£' building w11s cl osed fo•·
IL~ t

mvlt at !On io all chu rc hPs and the
co mmu n i! ;~~ to jo in in and support
the endeavor.
The fo llow Ing groups Will be
si ngin g thi s F rid ay : the Full
Gosp£01 Travel&lt;;!rs. Ec hos of
Prai se. t h&lt;' Stap leton Family and
the .Johnson Fam ily .

f ifty years and .)la s dct~r l ora t ed
du ri n ~ that tim e. This will be one
of s£Over ai sings pla n n~d for t he
upcomi ng months to ra ise money
to re nova te t he dett'r iorat lng
build ing w hich has been closed
for rtrtv ye,t r ~
Pastor· Bob r.ruhb ex tends an

Recognition given at school
,\ rc-

o~ nltlo n

rrrrmo ny

V.~ as

hPid llocenti~· and !0 first &lt;~ n d
seco nd vear diet !'lie . tUd('nts at
Hock in ~ 'l'l'ch n lra l CoiiPge were ·
r!'&lt;'Og n lzl.'d.
Among s r~·o nd - yca t• stu d!'nt s
~ ~ rccog nlzcod wa s Janie Str,·wan of
- ~ • licm rock G r&lt;l VC
·
; • • Tl\ose co mp te! In!! the two-war
,· flS SO&lt;'Ia t£' dN! rec progra11· arc
· qual lfi d to m a n a~c the dl ~tary
• depar tm ent of a Jarg••r nu r si ng
home. to assist dlrtltla ns In
hos pit al s and to managp co m·

Norman deployed
to Okinawa

munlt y nu1rlllon programs .
A one-year cert iflcatl' t'nabl es
student s to ma nage a dlct ary
drpar tm£Ont of a sm all nursing
hom &lt;' ,
A rcov Jvcd i nt erest i n hPal l h and
fit ness has lncrcasl'd ca reer
opporl unill&lt;'s for dir tet lc tec hn l·.
C l ~ n s . i\ few op£On lnf!S ex ts r l n thP
progta m for the fal l qu arter . For
ad ditional In formatio n, call
Hoc king Techn ical Collcgt' (to ll
fr ee 111 Ohlo l . 1-800-282-4163 01

POMEROY - Bend O'Riv er
Garden Club wlil m eet Tuesday ,
7: 30 p.m ., at the home of M rs.
James Dt e'hl, Mulberry H eight s,
Pomeroy .
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees wil l m eet Thursday , 6: 30 p.m .. at the Rutland
Fire St ation.
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day will be held at the Salvation
Army, Pomeroy. on Thursday
from 10 a.m . ro 12 noon . All area
res id ent s in need of clothin g are
wel co me.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town ship Tru stees will m eet Thurs-

day , July 30, 6: 30 p.m ., at the
Rutl and Fire St ation.
Black lung clinic
Treatment Is available lor
retired. disabl ed or working coal
miner s with breathin g problem s
at the Bl ack Lung Clinic in the
Lancaster -Fairfield Communi ty
Hospi tal. Funds are available
through the Ohio Department of
Health to assist those miners who
are unabl e to pay for th e
treatment.
Ginny Dearing, Out reach Coer·
dinat or for the Black Lung Clinic,
will be at the Meigs County
Senior Center on Wedn esday
from 10 a. m to 2 p m to an swer
any ques tion s about the clinic.
Reunions
The !\3r d Nicholson f amily
reunion will be held Sunday ,
Augu st 2, a t Forest Ac res Park
near Rutland . Potluck dinner at
12:30.
The L awrence Whitlatch fam ·
ily r eunion wlil be held Sat urday.
August I , at the roadside park on
U .S. 33 , south of Pomeroy .
Dinner at 12: 30.

Attendin g from M eigs County
were Joanne and T im Clem , Jack
and Bev Codner . Joyce and Bill
Hoback, Chuck and J une Baker,
Mike, Lee and Brandi Codner,
K athy Baker, Jlil, J. J . and
M elody Law r ence, Randy Llpscomb, John, A/aron and T-roy
Hoba ck, Jim , Sandra , Jayson,
Jos hua and Jessik a Codner .
Th e 1988 r eunion will be held at
La k e Snowden, Athens, w i th
Jan ice Davis and family In
char ge of !'vent s.

Girl attends
leadership
conference l_ Sonj a St eel e. a j unior at Meigs
Hi gh Shcool, was one of 250 youth
r epresent atives from throughout
the sta te to participate in the All
Ohio Vocat ional Youth Leader ·
ship Confer ence - " We Can
Build This D r eam Together ."
The four-d ay co nfer ence was
held July 10-13 at th e State FFA
Camp Muskin gham near Carr ol·
!ton , Ohio.
The confer ence was designed
to include l earning experiences
whi ch will enable the participant s to ass ume major leader·
ship rol es in the local school and
community. Contents of the
program involved l eader ship development and a critical evalua·
tion of current issues of interest
to the youth.
A committ ee of ten students
wa s nominated by the Ohio State
Departm ent of E du cation. Div ision of Vocation al Education,
and was char ged with the responsibility of determining which
i ss ues would be discussed . The
topics included "! am a Lion, "
" Prejudices," "Just say No,"
" Sa y 1t Out Loud ," " Tap Into .
Life." "Rand R, " " Appropriate
Ac tions," " The Ri ght Stuff,"
" Wh at About You " and "The
Handicap In You ." Each topic ·
I nc luded a presentation by a
prominent speak er with oppor·
tuni ty for student participation.

.

Mari ne La nce Cpl. M ark F .
Nor m an, son of Moses and
M;vr tie V. Nor man of Po me·
roy . recently deployed to
Ok ina wa for a six month
tra ining period with the 3rd
Bat talion, 4th Marines, Camp
Lejeun e. North Ca rolina.
He Is a graduate of Meigs
High Schoo l. He joined thl'
Mar in£Os Corps in July, 1986.

7!\J - 35~1.

Legion hears Girls State attendee
Tammy Holt &lt;'r. Girls Stale
a report of her
stay a t Gl r l's-. S1a te at a rf'cf' nt
meeting of l h&lt;' Rac-l n£' A meriC'n
l.,('gion Auxiliary Unlr 602
Tammy was- lnt roducNt by
!'4a r lha l. ou Bl'eglr, Amrrlcantsm chairman. Wh ile at Girl's
Stal l' Tamml' wa s a m£Om ber of
th ~ Na l nbnalist parr v and a
~ ·· ·sl d&lt;' nl of li ay£Os Cl ly She was a
sta te II'OOp£Or In l h£' Girl's State
Hig hway Pa trol.
d~l t'ga t e. gJV&lt;'

:

.

0

214 EAST MAIN

-.

POMEROY
992-6687

LOCATED: MAIN ST .• RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON .- SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
PH. 742-3088
Master Card and Visa Welcome

•'

State Avte

·-·lie•
C••ll••i••

Cor r Ps pondrnce was read
fro m Ka therine Cu rl. out-going
distric t president
In ot ht'r bu s l nes~ i nstalial io.n or
offiC&lt;'I's was held by Lo uise
Stewa rt . ou t-going pn•sident and
pas t dis t r ict pre siden t. Inst alled
wPre,. Th elma Wall on. presi dent. Opal Diddle. fi r st v ic&lt;'
pres id ent . Leo ra Young, second
vice presldPnl . V icto•l a Abl es.
secr etary , Elizabet h Willford .

.·

lt ~t·uls

"l'ht•

-·

1--11 (luh nwi ut I&lt;A'o

uwt1 illlt"' rt.'c'•'fltly. At lh•• first ftl f'tiktJC ,

IJIIV\d Ltnd

·' ~&amp;"' on

l&gt;t•r•n

II'CIIht• · plt'Ct ~: t,. ,

"',
1\J••rntlt·r .,. dl"it ltM•••d tht• Uh of July pur a dt•
• •• · un •l d t·(·ldt'ff to ha\'1' u l'IU' w Ja.o;;h. i\lt' lody
\\t ·:. ~ ,•r prm•hlr d tlu• r t• lrt~ hnu-nll&lt;l.
At th £' Nl'('tlnd mt•t-tln~~: II w as unnount•tod
• th .ll ,til projN I1o must htt flnlshf'd hy lhl'
~,.
nt•\1 n w• &gt;tln lt.
'11w K id f ' un nf'l ·llnn l-It ( lu h mti a.... l w u
r&lt;
uu•t·lln lr' rt'f..'t'nl ll . 1'ht• first mt•llnJl, . hal~·
II., \o\ ,t .. :d th•• hunu&gt; nr t\nly Rt•lh llt•thw lun.
Tht • nu•rnlwrs di!'I('U""''d Wlll'n tld t.&gt;r
pr o,lt'd. s would ht• tinls hl'4t. I-~ or lht• projt•t1
lt'!'j~on. llt•thn·lan rtnL,.ht-d ht't' jurnpf•r.

.

Kt• fr, .,.; hnwnl ~

M't' rt• !&lt;it•n-t•d

nwt&gt;tlng wn• :II lht• hom.- or
tmda \\'t•ll, -lui\ t!. Tht• ~roup dlsut s~d
lluoir ft~ud 111ld ., t• wln4l; proJ('ti!j, how to
T ht•

"~ t ·o nd

modt•l th1 •ir 11UIIib, 11 nd how lu dt'fllon ·
stratt • lht-lr projt•tt . ( Indy Olh'l' rl. c•uunl)'
t· ~h·n!'lhm oi.ICt.'lll, dc•rn o n!!llntlf•d ttw r• •dpt•

fur tlont·y Milk Ball".
A hlrlhduy for l .lnda \\'t&gt; ll. ad\'liiO r.

Plans

for

a'c ti,·llics

of the

W it."'

198 7 ASTRO MARK Ill VAN

~~

Fully equipped. Choice of c:olors. 7 in stoc:k.

$2 98°

ml'tnhl•rN and two advlsot"N In at&amp;endewct!.
llt•m"' of hu~ ln~s dl.sr us!it&gt;d inc ludet1 a
d~mnn s tratlon t.'Ontes l, the trip to Noah's
Ar k Pnrk and th e faJr hoot h. t\ hOuiitplanl
drmon Mirallons WILli pl't's enWd hy .Jt'nny
Varnf.y and a creallvc-arlsdMnon14h"oll.ktn

c·luh pltnlt·.
Tht•lllllhlllltos l-11 ( 'lu hnwt -lu1)' 15nllh l'
hom r- ot Opal O) ••r "II h t o ur nwmh''' "'
all ~ ndln.:

• ·a.lr U(•tl\' iilt,.. wt•rt• dl !ii t 'U !!I~ 'd

and dt.&gt;nHJrNir.tllon... wt• r t• pr ~'1il t' n1MI h,\'
Sht•rrl Ramshur,; und 1'o nya Thornton.
Th t• ScuriU t• r!'i + II ( 'luhmti .July u~al tht•
horne ol Mar y llolter with M' \ 'f'n m e mht&gt;r !&gt;O,
ont' adv isor and nne rcm·st In au endun ct•.
,\food" d('mons tratlon Mas 'p rt&gt;!Wnt r d h)
Gr eta Rtf~ and 11 ~lnt'a pta

d('monstra-

a

WLl.'i prcsenh-d hy Kc lllt• Ervin.
~roup then wt&gt;nl
Rt&gt;frt ~ hments were

'rh c

swlmmlnr.
Merved hy ,Jen~Wy
Va rnt',\ . Thr next mf'etln1wUI he.July 2Hat
the horn e of Valft'lt' Pa&amp;UerHOII.

Th e t\Hred

An,;el~

f ,Jas oo Pullins; third, St..'Olt .-nd Randy
Burke, fourth. Al ex and A11ron Brown.
F1dr buoth and a c«.'OmpllshmentM 'Were

f01 a sc holars hip fun cl to be
sta•·tcd wl!h lhP first one to be

dlsc us.l ied.

m ade al a r £Oce nt meeting of the

H\.\'OH'df'd nexl ycu r.

Calllway pre!fented

Anoth er pl anning spssion wa s
se t for Sppt. 2! wllh I he place l o
be announc£'d l ater . Ques t ions or
co mm ent s m uy be m aikd to
Meigs .\lumn i Assoc iation. P. 0 .
Box 2:•. Middleport 457(i() m· by
co nt actin g one of I he officers.

s norln~.

11 wa s dcc ld£•d thai the ann ua l
rcumon will be held on t he fou r t h
Sal ur da)· of .June ~ac l1 :·;m r and
th at in J ~ SI\ a banquet and dance
wil I be held wi t h t h£' banquet 10 be
rc~IC' I'f'cl . Pl ans \\'f' l'(' also made

4-H Cluh nwl July 15

at the home of Gay Ann Burkt&gt; wkh two
.tdV~ors lind 17 members attelldln~:.
PriZL•s wt.&gt; rc distributed to the top Stanlf'y
st•ller s· flrl'4t, Crystu.l Kaylor: !iecond.

M ('tgs 1\l umni Assoei o':l l io n W&lt;'H'

:, group.
_,
'&lt;
·'
;~

lion M'a." prcMt•nh•d hy .Janel Spt• nn•r .
U('frt•shm('nti'i wrrf' !Wr\'t•d hy Tim and
E lizahtoth Law~WD
'fh1 · Country C rltlt·r~ 4- H C luh m~t .Jul.)'
'lO u.t lht•lmnw ol Bridget Vu rne,- with .!ib.

t•ti t•hr a tNI aftt•r tlw nll'l'lln g . 1'11 1' n t•xl
lfll'~"'ln,; "- Ul hf- ·luly ~ . a l tht• hnrtl•~ nf
llt-ac ht!t' \\'(•11. du rtntt M•hl t•h t hi!r t• "''Ill ht• .1

Alumni plans activities
"

tr eas i rer Frances Rober ts. cha·
plai n, E unie BrtnkPr , Sergeanl at
Arms
Mem bers dec Ideo not to hold a
picnic at the A ugust m eeting but
ins tl.'a d meet al the hall at 5 p.m .
and go as a group to McCoy's for
dinner.
The meetin g was closed by the
pres ident and re freshmenJ s were
sprvro by Sh irley and Vi cky
Ables .

Meigs County .4-H news reports

.·

Speeial ~a'n Lease Package

&amp;ott Burke presented a salety report
about

briDS' hom &lt;'

ulunt•
11

and MlsQ

health r eport on

tt.•fre5hment Mwert' sert.t&gt;d by lho~o~e who
had cooklnllt projeds.
Tht' next m eefin~t wUI b e duly 21'\ at 10

u.m. at lhe home or Sunn Pullins. Projeds
wUI bt• gaded at the next meellnK" and
Jenny Roush will prt!Ment • heaUh report

and u n •port on Veterinary Selence.
Crysta l Kaylor wUJ lliHo present a heallb
report.

:: Murray family reunion held

0 PEl MONTH PLUS APPLICABLE TAX

,•
•
•

Based on 48 months, 60.000 miles, $300 security deposit.

•.:
·• ·
••
·•
·

· ~·

•

I

with a song t hey wrote entitled,
" Th,e Sayr e Bunch" .
Attending wer e J anet and
Valer ie Codn er , Springfield,
Mo.; John, .Julie, Cory and Tyler
Sayre. M acon, Ga.; Na t han,
Patsy, Ca l eli and Rachel Hyman,
Houston, Tx.; Janice, Nicole,
and L arry Davi s, A ll,&gt;any, Oh. ;
Bob, Cindy , Chr isti Sa yre, San
Antonio , T x.; Har old, K ar en,
Angie, Nathan and Seth Haynes,
Ft. L auderdale. Fl a. : Pam , Jen·
nlfe~. and Heath Proffit t, Ma rtinsville, Ind.: Bob and El ain e
Sayre. Boy nton Beach, Fla .:
Matt , Paula, Geoffrey, Gr egory
and Lucas Norman , and Shir ley
Grim, St. Clairsville, Oh. ; Nancy
and Jonathan Johnston, Selawik ,
Alaska; Val, Becky, Jonathan
and Val erie Tay lor. Livingston .
La.; St eve. T ami, Beth, and Amy
Bak er , Va .

Calendar/ happenings

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
"CEniNO 10U THERE SAFEL1"

Tuesday, July 28, 1987

'

A L--Eas t.
Rangers 5, Brewers 4
At Arlington , T exas, Mike
St anley doubled hOme two r uns
with one out in the ninth Inni ng to
lift the Ran gers t o !heir fou rth
straight v ictory . The Ranger s,
49-49, reached the .500 mark lor
the first time since Apr ilS, when
Texas was 1.-1.
Blue Jays 10, Red Sox 8
At Toronto, Rick Leach singled
hom e Willie Upshaw from third
to highlight a three· r un eighth
inning. Jeff Musselman, 8-4 ,
workPd the eighth inning for th e
v ict ory and Tom Henke pit ched
the ninth to notch his 22nd save
and nin th of the m onth. a club
r ecord. Ca lvin Schira ldi f ell to
5·5
AlhleUcs 6, Angels I
A t Oak land, Calif , Dave Ste
wart won his sixth st ra ight
decision and Luis P oionia sin gkd
three tim es t o pace a 13·hlt
altack ' Stewart , D ·7, fired a
rtve·hllt er. Wllh 13 victories, he
!r alls only K ansas Cit y's Brei
Saberhagen (151 and t he C ubs '
Rick Sut cliffe (1 41 among majOr·
lr·ague pitchers .

U.S. cage team faces NBA team

to first In Monday night' ~ American Leagu&lt;•
action In Oakland. (UPI)

SAFE AT SECOND - Oakland's Mike Davis
goes Into second with his arms raised as Angels
semnd sacker Mark McLemore makes the throw

Gaettl hit a strike for his
g am e-winning homer on a 3-2
count from Nunez aft er fouling
off seven pllches.
" He kept coming at m p wlth h is
bes t stuff," Ga ettl said. " It's a
sltuation wher e you.don' t w ant t o
walk anybody. "
Gaettl 's 20th homer ca m e one
out aft er L ombardozzl hit a
. three- run homer to tie the score
3·3. M ark Lan gston had enter ed
the ninth with a two-hitter before
Greg Gagne led off with a single.
Dan Gladden walked befor e
L ombardozzi knoc ked L angs ton
out with his fourth homer .
Frank Viola , l1 ·6, pit ched eight
I nnings and won his fifth st raight
start. Harold Reynolds and J im
Presley had homer ed to gl\·e th e
Mar iner s a 3-0 lea d
In other gAm es, De troit de·
f E&gt;ated Chica go 4-1. T £Oxas edged
Milwau kee !\,4, Toront o outslugged Bos ton 10·8 and Oa kl and
tounced Ca lifor nia 6·1.
In the only Nat ional League
g am e, Los Angeles outlasted Sa n
F ra n ~l sco 6 !\in 12 Innin gs_
Tiger s 4. While Sox I
A,t Detroit , Bill M adlockllnl.'d a
tie- breakin g single with none out
In the ei ghth innin g and Ala n
Trammell followPd w ith a two·
run sin gle for the Tlgers'fe&gt;urth
st ra ight trium ph. Frank T ana na.
1 1~7. pit ched his foUl th comp lete
as Detroit m ol'ed wit hin one- half
gam e of t hP ldi &lt;' Ya nkcPs In lh e

The Daily Sentinel

,.

•

The Murray reunion combined
with a three-day family get·
together was held on the Charles
0 . Murray property in Albany
recently.
Celebration of the 49th wedding
anniversary of Charles H. and
Margaret Murray, Pomeroy,
wlls a feature of the gathering.
The decorated anniversary cake
was baked by Charlotte Rowley.
Camping, games, hayrides,
flrev orks, and campfir es were
activities of the get-together

attended by Anna Murray , Jenlfer. Russell, Tyler, Texas;
Charlotte Murray and Wilbur
Rowley, Amber, Jorden, Seth
Keitel, Ironton; Mike, Denise,
Heatber Ashley, Benjamin Row ley , St. Clairsville; Jack, Mlnada
Murray, Eddie, Brent Slinms ,
Alicia, Corey, Devon Pt'hkerton,
Gallipolis; Charles 0. Debra,
Mary Ellen and David Murray ,
Albany, and Charles H . and
Margaret Murray, Pomeroy.

.'

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR TAB
IS C NG ON AUGUST l4th
I

TOPS meets
Terri Smith was the weekly
best loser and Shirley Turner, the
runner-up at the weekly meeting
of TOPS OH ~456, Rutland. The
·weekly fruit basket was won by
Marcia Barrett. Several new
contests to begin In the fall were
discussed. ThP club meets every
Tuesday from 6 to 7 p.m. and
Information may be obtained by
calling 992-2612.

ADVERTISING DEADLINE'·IS
AUG. 7th

CALL DAVE OR PAUL 10 PLACE YOUR
AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION
CALL 992·2155 FOR DDAILS

�•
Page 6 The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. July 28. 1987

r----People in the n e w s - - - - - - - -·:.-.___,
By WIUIAM C. TRO'M'
United Press International
SONNY CROCKETT TAKES A BRIDE: The "Miami Vic&lt;'"
scriptwriters have been told to come up with more outrageous
plots for next season's espisodes a nd what could be more
outrageous than this: Don Johnso11's Sonny Crockett cha racter
getting married.
Michael Man.ll, the show '.s' executive produce r, says Sonny
will fall In love with a rock 'n ' roll singer- a role tha t hasn't
been cast yet - a nd make her .his bride, The marriage is an
a ttem pt to "emotionally Involve our characters" more so than
In previous seasons, Mann sa id.
He refus.e d to say how long the marriage would hist but
described it as a "four-episode s tory line." Filming for the
1987-88 season began In Miami last week a nd, on a fashion note,
Mann said fans of the show wllf see lighter colors In daytime
shots.
JOEl. RoCKS RUSSIA: Billy Joel' s jokes didn't go over very
well but his music was easily understood by the 25,000 people in
Moscow's Oly mpic Stadium for the nation's firs t full-scale
American rock concert . Even some of the policemen In the back
of the stadium wer e dancing In the aisles as J oel c losed the show
with "Back in the U.S.S. R. " a nd "Upt own Gir l. "
With 'hls wife, the mini-skirted Christie Brinkley , filming him ,
Joel drew a bi g ha nd whe n he.dedlcated the song " Hones ty' ' to
Vladimir Vysotsl!y , the lat e poet-musician who is popular with
disaffected Soviet youths.
Joel had a translator on s tage for his between-songs patt e r but
he didn't get much r eaction when he told the crowd, " I don't
s peak Russian but coming from New York. a lo t of people in the
s tates don't understand me e ither." .Joel's fina l remark to the
crowd - one it\. which he used a four -lett er w'ird to urge tl)e
crowd not to take any gulf olf a nyone- wasn't tran slated at a lL
, RIDING THE COATTAILS: Last week 's dramatic courtroom

performance by Roml11a Danielson already is boosting her
career. The aspiring actress, who testified about her.adulterous
affair with Peter H«ilm, Joan CoJBns' estranged husband, says
she's on her w·a y to the lop now.
" I've always had attention in m y life because I always go out
wit h a lot of powerful people and I am with them," she said.
"Now I get attention because of m e. I like this much better."
Danielson, 23, collapsed on the witness stand last week after
her soap-opera testimony and says by the very nex t day she had
arranged a P eople magazine interview and had reeelved three
movie otrers. "I'll be the biggest," Danielson said .
The slim Ita lia n-Iranian actress says she now Is pursued by
paparazzi , retains round-the-clock bodyguards and Is considering selling her story for $175,000 to a British tabloid . As for
Holm, he denies the a ffair a nd says Danielson Is jus t a publicity
hound.
.
CARTER COUNTRY: Jimmy Carter doesn't think his
successor In ·the White Hous,e Is doing enough for the nation 's
homeless so Carter again put on his work clothes and tool belt,
gra bbed a hammer and sta rted rectifying the situation.
Carter. in Charlott e, N.C., to build homes for the Habitat for
Humanity program, said, " In this community and around the
world we hope to set an example of what can be done outside of
government but I don't think our pres ident is doing enough to
a ddress the problems of the homeless. "
• Carter says his wife, Rosalynn , would !Ike to see him run for
the presidency agai n but he says no way . On !amity matt ers,
Carter says working with his wife on a buildin g is eas ier than
writing a book together .
"We get along a lot bett er on a building proj ect but I think
we've s tayed separat e,''' Carter said. " In fac t , this time, ts he'sl
working on one Muse a nd f 'm working on another." The
Carters' da ughter, Amy , a lso Is working on the project.

Pir(:lte radio seeking broadcast advertisers
By HENRY G. LOGEMAN
LONG BEACH , N.'l;. (UPI ) A pirate radio station broaqcasting from a rusty freighter anchored off Long Isiand as a n
alternat.ive to commercial rock
radio says it is looking for
·advertisers to expand its music
and "s hock radio" programs.
"Commercial radio in the New
York metropolitan area stinks,"
Jonathan Clarke, the sta tion's
assis tant program director, said
Monday. "We're going to change
that , a nd In the process we're
going to have some fun. "
The rogue station ha s been
broadcasting on 1620 AM a nd
103.1 FM , offer ing ;1 lively if
sporadic format of rock ' n' roll
sipce Thursday from a mothballed 175-foot freighter about 5
miles off Long Beach, a New
York Cit y suburb, des pite efforts

by four governm en t agencies to
s hut it down.
Cla rke said that so far RNI has
been finan ced by severa l investors- he would not name the m and will contirju e broadcas ting
on a test basis from · the
Honduran-registered ship, renamed Sara h, every evening
from 7 p. m . to midnight. He sai d
the operators hope to ex pand
ai rtime soon.
" We are a co mmercial station,
a nd we plan to operat e 24 hours a
day as soon as we ca n get some
a dvertisers," Clarke sa id.
Statio n disc jockeys , who have
been playing vintage rock 'n' roll
s uch as Bob Dyla n and Fleetwood Mac alo ng with some
comedy records, take the ir inspi rat ion from the so-ca lled "s hock
ra dio" style of Howard Stern, a

·raucous morning radio host who
.has been cited by the Federal
Communicatio ns Commi ssio n
fo r making le~d remarks on
sta tion WXRK -FM in New York
Ci ty, Clarke said.
" We relish the s tuff How ard
Stern does ," he sa id. "We want
freedom of speech, a nd we plan
to feat ure qualit y rock 'n' roll a nd
comedy ."
An a nnouncer on the rogue
s tatio n was monit ored c hanting,
" Ju st li ste n toRN! . it will get you
high."
But its progra mm ing prompted the F CC, the Coast Guard, the
Customs Service a nd the Sta te
Department to try to mu zzle the
broadcas ts.
"Plans are in e ffect to stop the
operatio n," said a s pokesman for
the F CC,'s e nfo rceme nt division

in New York. He would not
specify what 'meas ures mig ht be
used.
Authorities from the four fed ·
era! agencies boarded the freighter on Saturday a nd ordered the
broa dcas ting stopped. But station officials refused, saying they
were anchored beyond 5 miles of
the U.S. coastline and thus In
International waters, beyond the
jurisdiction of the FCC.
The Sara h was strat egica lly
sit ua ted to reac h rock fans, lyi ng
in the Atl a nti c at a point
equid is ta nt from the day -trip .
resorts of Jones Beach a nd Coney
Is la nd, both packed with beach·
goer~ basking under sunn y sklc•
Monday with temperat ures in the
80s . But it could not be determined how m a ny had tuned In to
RNJ.

Divers discover wine, maybe worth millions
NANTUCKET, Mass. iUPI)The discovery of up to 5,000
bottles of wine on the sunken
ilner R.M.S. Republic boosted
sal vagers' hopes they would a lso
find up to $1.6 billion in gpld coins
believed on board.
" It Is an encouraging sign;
absolutely,'' expedition director
Robert Polackwlch said Mond ay
night as the privately financed
salvage group, based In Tampa,
Fla ., continued diving for trea~
sures 280 feet below the surface.
The wine discovery is the first
major flnd based on Information
researched a'n d gathered by
Ocean Salvors Internal ional. P olackwich said. Mo~t of the wine is
believed to have been bottled In
Er::ope before this century.

,t;ar tter m the J-week-old expedition, divers found the anchor of
the Florida, whic h collided with
the Re public 55 miles off Nantucket Jan . 23. 1909 , but did not
s ink. The Re public r ests In 280
feet of water.
·
Two people died on the Republic, which. had set sail ·14 hours
earlier from New York wit h s uc h
wea llhy passengers as Pittsburgh fin a ncier James Mellon.
Four died on the Florida. which
was carryfng Immigrant s from
Italy to New York. More than
2, 000 were saved.
"From t he sta ndpoint of makin g this salvage a wor thwhile
e ffort , we have a lready achieved
that with this find ," Polackwlch
said of the wine discovered over

ment s that about 6,000 bottles of
the weekend in a pant ry a nd
wi ne were loaded onto the
storage area .
Project direc tor Martin BayeRepublic before It left New York
r le sai d his researc h shows th e
for the M('dlte rrane an , PolacRRepublic was trans porting $3
w!ch said.
million in Amer ican gold eagle
The sa lvage company concoins bought by France to prop
tracted with Christie's a uc tion
up the al llng Czarist Ru ssian
house of London on Monda y to
governme nt. At the time, mos t of
board the Inspector and eva lua te
t he world's gold was stored in the
t he wine, which. will be left on the
United States. Th e co ins would be
Republic untll early n e~t week.
worth $400 millio n to $1.6 bill io n
Polackwich said wine experts
todav , he said.
e$tl ma ted . the pre-1900 vintage
The s hip's plans mysteriou sly · wiiw cou ld t&gt;e worth up to $4 ,000
disappeared alt e r .the colli sion,
Per bottle. Depending on prec ise
and Pol ackwlc h said recently he year and vint age, th e 2,000 to
believes someone working for the 5,000 bottles of wine on the ship
Whit e Star Line , which owned the could be worth between Sl
sh,!p, stole the bluepr int s know' mllllon a nd $3 million ('Onserva ing the gold was aboard.
ti vely , he sa id.
Th e sa lvagers knew from docu-

Soviet, N.]. reporters to swap jobs
-in name of superpower understanding
TRENTON, N.J. t UPI) - A
New J ersey newspaperman will
ply his ttade at a Moscow weekly
for a month while a Soviet
journalist chases stories In Trenton as pari of a job e~change
aimed at fostering unde rstandIng between the s uperpowers.
Lenin District Mayor Sergey
Goryachev, visiting Trenton with
a delega tion this- week, and
Times publisher Richard Bilotti
announced the proposed ex change Monday.
Edward Baumeister J r ., man aging editor of Th e Times of
Trenton and for mer CBS News
producer, will work for the
weekly Moscow News.
The Soviet journalist, not yet
named , will spe~d one month as a
report er in the Trenton paper' s
newsroom.
The exchange comes during
Increased Soviet openness to the
U.S. media. U.S. televis ion ne tworks have recently bee n a llowed to pre pare re ports from
areas of the Soviet Union pre viousl y' closed to fore ig n
journal!sts.
The exchange was a rra nged as

Quote of the. day
By United"Press International
President Reagan, defending
his political st(ength in the'
remaining months of his term
with a phrase taken from Lt. CoL
Ol!ver North 's lawye r at the
congressional Iran -Co ntr a
hearings :
"There Is much to do In the .
next 18 months. And to borrow a
phrase which you might have
heard recently from one of the
lawyers at the legislative hear· :
ings there going on In Washington ... I reject a potted· plant
presidency."

part of th ~&gt; sis ter -city relation·
s hip between- Trent on a nd th~&gt;
Lenin Dis tri ct in central Moscow , an area w ith a population of
about 100,000 within ·the cit y of
a bout 8 mill!on.

WORK ...

Call one o( our representatives today for
additional information

one of the life jackets had a small.
l!ght, " Oscar Valdez Jr. said
Monday. " I started waving It a II
around , and they saw the l!ght ."
Vald~, Gustavo Valdez, Hec·
tor Martinez and Javier Dlaz
we re picked up by the State
Flamingo, a private vessel !hat
found them .c l!nglng togetther in
the heavy seas shor tly after
midnight Sunday .
•.
The four were aboard the
68-!oot Cochise. loaded with 1,300
pounds of s hr imp. It began
taking on water through a hole In
the wooden hull and sta rted to ·
sink.
"Too many tons o! water hit
us," Oscar Valdez said. "There
was a lot of water. llhink it was
half full alrea·dy , a nd it was too
late."
The c rew mad e a di stress call
to the Coast Guard. ·
" They were about 2 m!les
east-northeast of the (South
Padre Island! jetties. Eve n du ring the · time we were talking to
the m on the r ad io. th ey weregett ing read y to aba ndo n the
boat. They were going ctown ,"
Coas t G uard Se nior Chie f J e rry
Cartmill said. ·
The State Flamingo. alerted to
the s inking, plowed throug h 6-10
9-foot seas and 20-knot winds to
make the rescue, 90 minutes
after the Cochise sa nk.
The F lam ingo was m et by a
4()-loot Coast G uard rescue· boat
tha t transferred the four men to
the South Padre lslancl station.
They were t reated for mino r
injuries .

----------------,
IN THE

V8 .
VIRGINIA NEWLUN

C11o No. 24U1
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Pu.....it to thl O•.W of
tho Prolrlte Court of Melga
County, Ohio, In
Number 24421, I witt offer ""
.... II publio euctlon on thl
14th dey of Auguot, 1 IS7, II
10:00 A.M.. on tho front
ttops of thl Metga County
Court HouN,
Po"*"'f,
Ohio,
thl to..,_tnv ,.._
_ _ _, _ t . . _ e d
In thl Still at Ohio, County
ot Melgt. Townehlj&gt; at
· Otlv8, ond bounded ond ct.

RCA 25"

IEMOTE CONSOLE

$49900
RCA Camcorder

S98800

v

Appnlled Value:

IOid for not lese than twothird• (2 / 3) ofthe aforellkl
appraiMd value.
&amp;old rool 10111, 11 10 bo
10td aalndhtklualperc•.
Thotorms of - ond PlY·

bond in the form approved.
with sufficient auretiea. In •
eum iquel to tfMt total.um of

Admlr'll~tratrht of tM

Public Notice

·-InI-

-Of-·

glnnlng. - " " ' , , - - ·

EXCEPTINO thlltotrom 3

or ..... con-

Public Notice

1-------=-----==-ADVERTISEMENT

•ovM to Rotcoo Wlllt oftd
Elton W- by dlld rtcordld
in Dood . _ 177, Poge
407. Metga Coontv Oood
Records.
Dood A.-'10: Volume
213. Pove 155, M•too
County Dood A-do.
Approloed Vo!ue:
'
tiO,IOO .OO .
P;t,RCEL NUMBER 2:
. Bot
In a-ion 125,
Town
Aonge #It, Olivo
TC&gt;wnlblp, M.... County.

14.

OMo and comrnencinv lit
till N&lt;N1hNtt c - of Section U5; Thence w..111o119

'.!lOP THtl

WFF~

SUPER SAVINGS

to Holzer
Thank&amp;
Medical Staff and
Nuraes , Dr. Gricoski.
Dr. Morgan and Dr.
Mize for their wonderful ·care while I
was a sugicat patient.
Thanks to all who
sent lovely cerdt. for
. the flowers and prayen and the visits of
each
one. Special
thank• to the Eagle
' Ridge Church~ Elva
' and Lew it Hudton.
the Coates family ,
:and to my family for
·their loving care.
:May God ble11 each
·one.
'
Mrs. Ada Evans
Rt. 1 Racine Oh.

LIVING ROOM

.

CIEiiT TElliS- UYAWAYS

992·2635 .

OH. 48771 until 12:00
tNoonl. E.D.S.T. tEostorn
Ooylight Sovlnga Tlmal on
Auvuot e . 1987 ond lmmod·
lototy thlrMIIer witt be
opened ond r..d ok&gt;ucl lor

Tuition .............. 61 ,198. 84

Receipts ......... .t 2.632 .82
sources . .... 5.115,270.43

Federal

Sources .... .. . 267 ,450 .05

TOTAL .. ....... 7,570,896 .75
(EXPENDITURE
OtSiiURSEMENTS)
lnotructlon ... 4.433 .642 .01
Supporting
Services .... 2,922 , 164 .93
Extr:acurricular
Activities ..... . l36 .415 .34

Debt
Services ....... 356. 61 4.06
TOTAL .. .... ... 7.847.836 .34
Exc. Rcpts. Over/ (Under)
Di1b ....... ,.. .1276. 939. 59!
(OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES )Contributiona·&amp;
Proceeds from SQie

of Notes ....... 228 ,987.00
Operating Transfers

...rv

~•

for the conatruc-

tion of 1 po~ type storege
building located at tht txiat·

tions . for informttkm purpOMI . ere on IU. 11 the OffiCe of the Boerd of E ducat ion. Southern Local School ·

Diotrlct. Racino. OH .
Copi" of Specifications

end

PropoNI Form• to-

Expand ............. 296 .00

Operating Transfers

- Out ...... .. ... !23,460.00!
Advances

- Out ... :....... (1 3.084.67)
Retwnd of Prior Years

Recei pts ......... (3 ,402 .80!
Total Other Fin . Sources

IUses! .. ........ 21 1.679.65

Disbursements &amp; Other

Uses / Not .... .166,269.941
Beginning Fund Cash
Balance ....... 751 ,875.30
Ending Fu nd Cash

Balance,.. ...... 686. 615.36
EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS

gether with eny further in·

Activities ........ 70, B59.36

Total ................. 88, 776. 16
!Continued O
n Page 10)

•REMODELING •

R'OOM ADDITIONS

•GARAGES I POLE
BUILOIN08

REFERENCES
Ph- Dar ar IY•ni"81

985-4141
GEIIDA&amp; COIITIACYOIS
7 - 1~· 17

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Pl umbing 1nd elrtetrha~ l

Avo ., NE , New Phlledotphia.
Ohio. At! propoNia sholt bo
made in conformity with the
Gonorol Co,.. of Ohio, 1holl
be in a Mated anvelope ad·
droued to !hi Boord of Edu,
cation. Southern
Local

- Concr ..•

No Bidder shall withdraw

hit bid for a period of aixty

1101 doy1 tlte•the ,..to of re-

WOfk

oum of the proposol Including aU add alternaliv•. IUP·
ported by a Power of Attor-

992-6215 • 992-7314
P-ray,

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Transexle Repair•

II. 7 an&lt;l lashan

TVs, Antennas ,
Satellite Sales
Installation
.· Service
.Electronic Organs
Mobile service

HRS: 12:00-8 :00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

614-843-5248

PH. 949-2969

REASONABlE - RfliAilE

BUY - SELL ~ TRAOE
'1 · 30-1 mo.

8-20-'86 tin

--------~~~--------------~~ .

Dealer

Farlri Equip1111111

MIKE'S

LONG'S

REPAIR

CONSTRUCTION

S.nice Call

Only $J250
IIIVIIG AU MAIO••AHDI OF
-~ .,PIIAHW. All

.....,.. ...

r....,...,.,~

M.ka a drum come true· holt
an e.~:changa student A .S.S.E.. •
non·ptofit org1nization is look-

.Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PAT HILL FORD

949-2263
or 949-2168

~92 - 2196
Middleport. Ohio
1· 13-tfc

Roger
..v . Hysell
Garage

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
.Alto Trutllllttloa
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

SERVICE
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SE

.

--

Mexican Chihuahua, black and
white, female. Call 614· 4469292.
7V:a week old puppies. Part
B••gle. c.n 614-367·018&amp; •f~
ter 5.
.
-~-----'------ - l c-

White buck rabbit with red eyes.
Also malo part Pekingase. 614985-4397 .
Frae kitten•· Calico. long haired.
tabby striped, aeveral to choose-

Six VJ: D1lmation puppies to
good home. CAll 614-986 ·
4488 .
Half Border CoHie and half Irish
SettM puppies. 304-875-8574.

6 Lost and Found
REWARD: No quettion• uked

for retum of biiiCk and white.
mele, Sib•riln Husky taken from
O .J . Whi1a· Kemper Hollow .rea.
Set. PM · Sun. AM {7· 18,7· 19).
Answers to "Mea-•ha" . Call
614-448· 3172 oF448-7216 .

7

Yard Sale

·······Gallipolis..... ...
&amp; Vicinity

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Older upright pieno, fair condi·
tlon . With bench . 136. Chord
organ, 110. Call 614-379-

'Rodney Rummage Sale at com·
munlty building "from SAM·
&amp;PM. July 27th-August lth.
July 31 · Aug . 1 , Corner ofGraen
ACres •nd Neighbofhood Rd.·
T.V., sterea. bicycle. nice school
&lt;::loth••·

.

PH. 742-2027

rq

fr••·

·

-

Vinyl &amp; Alumo Siding
Complete Guttor Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of At! Types
Worked in Homt Area
25 hats
FREE ISliM ATIS
CALL

1-614-843-5425 .

ANTIQUES
IUY 01 SELL

RiveriM Antiques
1114 East ..... St.
·, Polllir"'
IIOUIS. T.... wtcl.·fri.
lla.m.l87p.m.
Sur.loyr 1 p.no.·7 p.m.
a, Chan1t or .,....,,_,

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

7/23/ 2 mo. d.

15 Yrs. Elperienco in

1RT:

Churd•••·

992-3711

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
1-15-17 I mo.

.
-a:
c LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

z

~

!

licensed Cli~ical Audiq_logist

.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6&amp;01
417 Second Avenue, BoK 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·

NEW HOMES
RESIDENTIAL
RENOVATIONS

PUSTIC ClAn

fREE
ESTIMATES
ALLWORK
GUARANTEED

N. Inti AYE.
MIDDUPOIT, OH.

,' anti

1/2 PRICE
Mettth of

fo~r ·

jGu~ranteed

nished .

r41Jturn
transportion discus•ed at Inter ·
view.) Abov• average ••niftgs
and casual dr ... mall• this job
fun. easy. end very desirable to

the ygunger set. Must be abteto
re-locate todey. FOr interview
... Mr. or Mrt. Port•r. Thur.ct.,only jJuly 30th) It the Best
Western, Gallipolis et 1 1 1.m . to
1 p,m. or 2 p.,m. to 6 p .m. No
phone ulls accepeted. Parents
welcome at interview .
HIRING! Government job•. your
•rei. &amp;16.000 . 188,000. ~"
602· 838-8885 h t. 1449.
Government Jobs. 11 6,04Q •
$69,230 · year. Novw hiring. Call
1-805-887-eooo Ext . R· 9106
for cun•nt fedlf .. lis1.

Federal. State and Civil SeNice
Joba 116,707tol59,148· _.ar.
Now hiring . Call Job
1· 618-459-3611 bt. FU~2
for info. 24 hours.

Li"•

Help Wanted: Pa"-time tetephone work in your home. Sind
name 1nd number to Tri- State
Distributors, 1041 M.a rket &amp;t.
Parkersburg, W.V. 26101 .
•

·'
,

TECH

Va isac;cepting 1pplic.tions fore
i'ull time medical Lab Technician.
quelified appliCint. will h-. a 2
or 4 year degree in Medical
Technology 1nd a current ASCP
Registry. Hospitll off4tfl acellent ..lary and ben"it• for more
lnhmnetion c1ll, P~tr.annel Oir•
cotr 304-372 -2731 or apply •'

Hospital bu..inns office.

AVON. no Mrvice ch•rga. open

territorie s". phone 304 · 675 ·

1429.

.

MONEY FOR COLLEGE: call the
Army National Guard for FREE
lnformetion packet. 1· 800·642·

36t9.

•

AVON · All araaa. Cd M•rilyn
Weaver 304-882· 2145.
'

773-5675.

43.0. AA·EOE.

CjREAT POSITIONII

Don'1 min this rareo1-Portunil:yl
Work from your home hirlno.
training , people. Free trainino

provid&amp;d. W•ekty income. lde•l
job for moth&amp;rl. Form• t•achr•.
p1rty plan dealers. C.U ( coii18Ct)

now!! Betty V•allo 304· 744·

0924.

12

Situations
Wanted

Older man wants to mow inwMh
someone who will help ear• fo.-

him. In tOwn. Call 814-4ot83668, talk to Ernest McKinney.

18 Wanted to Do

Ylrd S1le, Wed, July 20, 10:00
tiiii:OO. 502 Second St.
.

Jim 's odd jobs painting, drhle·
way resealing, carpenter work &amp;
roof repair, trees &amp; hedges
up•rienced . Cell 61 4 · 379 2 416.

8

Public Sale ·
8t Auction

Rick P••rson Auctioneer li·
&lt;::en•ed in Ohio •nd
t Virginia. Ra•l E•••••· antique, term ,

w..

llquid•tion ules, 304· 773;
6785 or 773-5430 .

9

Wanted To Buy

Jim Mink ChtN.·Oid• lne.
Bill Gene John•on

8t4· 448· 3872

for '83

Room 1nd boerd for eld•rtv and
hand ic apped with ~rsonal c•e . .
In Midttiaport C•ll 814· 992·
6873 .
Grover' s Lawn Mower R•pair.
We' ll pick up 1nd deliver. Good,
us~ mowers for Ale. Cell
fiU -742· 2393 or 614 -742 ;

3091 .

We ply c••h for late modet clean
used cara.

TOP CASH paid

Can do light heuling 1nd roofing!.
Reesonable rate• . M•rio"
Snider . 8U- 949 -2629 .

model

and new• used Clrt . Smhh
Buick-Pontile. 1911 h•tem
Ave .. G•llipoUs. C1ll 114-4482282.

Will h1ulany kind oftra•h except
CMl

and

truck

bodi...

•20

pickup load. 304-87&amp;- 7274 .

Hauling away eny tra.tl or junk
e11cept car &amp; truck bodll•.
e20.00 per 1ruck load; 110.00
h11f load. 304-875-7274.
Went to babysit, axp.rienced;
raferencu . Cal
can JUpply

304-675-377 • .

Flll oll C! i!l

DABBLE
SHOP

CERAMIC BISQUE

and uen sportion •lways

27-1.

1::======;=
n~~=========11 Auction
.., Col. Os&lt;::~r E. Click,
r
304-895-3430.
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
CJ Swim Molds • Interpreting Selvices

school greds .. 17 to 21 . 3. w ...

pd.' tr1ining progr~m , lodging

Garage S•le, 403 First Street.
New Haven, W. V1. Monday July

. School1, H0111111,
Go..t tlw.... A.,_ 30, 1917

A FUN aLUE JEANS JOB
Jobs without experience are.
har·ci to fine but we hw• 1n
opening for you . Lots of tra~..~~
•nd beneUta. {No experitnce
necnsary, Wlitreu •nd Wilt.,
exp. httiPful,) Preflltl'a~e high

E•perienced prep and breBfast
cook . Send resume to P.O. Box
2~4. Grove City, Ohio 43123.

G•raga S-'•· 5 milu oft Rt. 87
on Gunville Rd. July 28 •nd 29,
antique cupbo•rds. br•as kettle.
furniture , clothing , Home Interior, dishu. etc.

R ESl DEN TIALICO MMEA C IAL

738 ,

R .N . epplieations now !:Jaing
accapted for full time position,
Pleaflnt Ve!ley Nursing Care
Center, 1pply personnel office
Pl ..a•nt V•l!erv Ho1p, 304-675·

.

St . M11on . Black and white TV,
bedspre1ds, drtperi ... Iota of
children• school cloth•... etc.

FREE ESTIMATES

P.O .Box

Porch ul•: 39340 A ocktprings
Rd . Ladi•• clothing, mis~;: . Wed.
and Thur. July 29 1nd 30.
1514-992 -5019.

/}

Three Family Verd Sele, Setur·
d-v Aug 1 . 9 ~oo ·till 7. 107 Fifth

Receiwe 50,_ Off
SECOND tuning if
tlone within one
year.

CPC,Inc.,

Pert time experienced florel
designer fntsh •nd silk. 364-

&amp; Vicinity

let th Fem 'lou I•

to:

G,eltipolis. Ohio •5631 .

Lee-Ritchie yard sale. July 31
end Aug . 1. 9 ·7'. Ritchie residence. Tyree Blvd., Racine. Big

··-----PfPieasaiif ____ _

FENCE COMPANY

,.Hard wort.:ing anr•Uva inili·
vidu al n.-ded lor local ofta
patrtion. Mult po.." ' ~

crafts. Oth..-s. Info (504) !141 0091 , EX1. 3667. Open 7 d.ys.
.CALLNOWI

furniture . 9·• ·

PIANO TUNING

tlandof Jackton, St. Rl. 93, B
8888 J•ckaon. Ohio 45140 . .

Excellent Wages for spare time
lltembly work; electronics.

2 family y1rd sale. July~ 30'th and
31st . Aug . 1 . C~rrOII Street.
Syracuse.

ACCENT

.
position

nurM

Ja cttson Gener•l Hoap, Ripty, W.

Michigan Sale-60 Neal - School
clothes. color TV , drapes, jewel·
ery, musicilllamps. dishes. toys,
and mia&lt;::.

V'lriety.

,.-,:uso

.ch~rge

LAB

Middleport
.&amp; Vicinity

992-3410

RN-LPN

Call61•· 494· 2790.

------· p·omeriiy: ·--------~

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

•

Man to work on d1iry f•m .
Pr•f• exp..-. wrth milking cows.

Giveaway

2612.

!85-3561
~II Meke•

•

Help Wanted

4

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores; We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

NEW- REPAIR

11

.

accurate t'fping. 1kllla. pl•••ht
1elephone voice and 1bllity $O
d..l wieh people. Send resume

Adorable flufho long haired kit·
tens . 614-992-7574 .

Rft~Olll

ROOFING

1

Ing for volunteers. Ho1t familift
In your area for .th• 1987·88
achool year. PlaHe help now.
C•ll R. L.' Mohl814 -353·8333
or Linda Blo•.., collec1 419·
638-6089 .

from . 614-992-2073.

4-16-86·11•

Howartl L. Writesel

'

t !

avaiMI•. EOE . louted 5 ~
north of Oak HHI. AppliCM"iDil•
accepted 1· 4. Mon.-Fri. He•·

"At Reasonable Pri&lt;os"

Day Or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Parts 8. Service

5/1 I«

,•,

•

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Avlhoriud John DNrt,
· New Hofland, Bush Hog

112tJtln

CAll ••,I.A7JI

DAVIS METAL SALES Is the Nation's fllltll p!"ffnc
MAIUFACTURER of D-RIB mttll roatiq I stdinJ.
We rofftrs 4 profiles: D-RIB. HI·RII, 5-V, COR·
• RUGATED. Orders custo11 cut to th1 inch at no et1111
chlree. DIS often 10 btlutltul col~ .Pill piVIn,
iztd and piVIIUtnt. FREE dtiiVIry 100 lqUI~I or
I)IDrt. Trims, skyli1htsand acceuorits. Quality dis·
counts awallablt.

U. Si RT. 50 EAST

IUSINISS PHONI

EAGlE RIDGE
SMAll ENGINE ·
CENTER
PARTS • SERVIU

ton. .

,

SERVICE

16141 992-771.

-.. .. ., ...... lr01h -

MT. VERNON, OH. 430150

BISSELL
BUILDERS

lfstOINCE PHONE

..........

P.O. BOX 1188

s.s.•u.J ••·

BOGGS

16141

111'1111 IIUUAHIIID 1 YIA.,
PUTSANDUIO..

AL

Owner /Mechanic

5-22 -87-2 mo.

SALE~ &amp;

Bantz

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills H'!re

V. C. YOUNG Ill

locattcl Halfw•r hlwHn

and Performance Bond in an
amount equal to the toUI

Pli. 16141 843·5425

.

lfl I'

,'d I ,: It !'

Full-time

We C•rrv Fishing Supplies

to obtain one (1) Ht of draw·
ingt . and
epeeificetiona
which deposit will be retl:lrned to the reapecttv.
party after receipt of their
bid. and after the documents
tre returned within flftun

pornied by a CombinotlonBid .

An 11 Ullll w11 ~Ill s

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

work
(free Estimates)

A ,..pooit of Thirry
tUO.OOI Oolloro 11 raqulrod

bids , •hipping ohargaa prepaid.
Each bid thall be accom·

John K.

161 North ltcond
Middlaporl, Ohio 45760

Repairs on All Makes

(IIi! doy1 titer rocolpt of

PH. 949-2756

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

School Dlatrlct. Box 171,
Racine. OH 4&amp;771, ond en-

dorHd " Propoul for New
Bue Garage'' on the out•d•
of the envelope.

EUGENE LONG
CAll:

!

.'

Wed . July 29. Thur. July '30. 250
Mulberry. Pomeroy. Toya, Misc.

. . . .. . ,...., rlllfll, ...

•'

1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S

tecta Merr Kn1pp Crawfis.
As.ociat1s, Inc .. 104 Fair

"free Estimates..

Truck. auto,· 8t
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding.
(All makes &amp; modotsl

Roofing of all Typea
Worked in home area

1

'I

Extrac urricular

•WINDOW REPLACEMENT

- Addona md remod!Ming
- Rooting lftil guner worll

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

Complete Gutter Wortc
Comploto Aomo,..ling

REVENUE RECEIPTS -

•ROOFING •SIDING

form1tion dHirad. mey be
obroiMd by tho 81ddon.
tram tho Ollico ot tho A•chl-

SIDING CO.

'
f

7-1 -'07-1 mo.

Refund of Prio r Years

Clllml, OHIO

·~ A( (win•• units Oftiy),

·•

·

- In ................. 3,719 .37
Advances- In .... 16.284.67

'""-

Find In Tile CiaSii(ied Section

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAI.

Farm (quipment

Donation• ........ 2.340.08

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Ml• and performing all labor

SUPERIOR

1 f.rnale Dom•dc Duck. C.ll
t14-742-2113
•

CAU Fill Fll! mtMAtE
Hl-•116 • U7 -7110

3 Announcements

· 20 veare

State

I

lotwldrott

I

~

Grants in Aid-

BUSin
•· ess servtces

tht furniahing of all rnMt·

3 Announcements

$26600
MIDDLEPOIIT

Misc.

Eernlngs on
·
th• Southern Locll School
lnvMtmenu . .42 .663 .48
Oittrict. 801. 178, R1cine, ~,;;;,;.;,;,;;,;,..;;,;,..;__ _ _ _,j,.._ _ _ _~----"i

ceipt of bida.

The hilt was herd to
climb.
So He gently closed
his loving eyes.
And whispered "Peace
Be Thine."
Sadly misoed
by family

50°/o OFF

FIOM

will~

received by the Trusur... of
tM Bo1rd ot Education of

Fees .. ~ .... ..... .....4.660 .00

June 30. 1987
Total ................ 70. 859.36
GOVERNMENTAL
j:XPENDITURE DIS FUNDS
;• BURSEMENTS REVENUE RECEIPTS r·e·-;:_~~~~~';;~~~~.'
Taxes ......... l1.969.96405
. i ...... , 68.776 .16

e.,.,.,

2 pc. EAILY AMEIICAN

lOR

FOR 1105
Sealed propoNia

For The Fisc•l Year Ended

in9 she of the Southem Lotill Nonh llno of Section co! School Olotrlct. Recine,
•n ro t point wl!l&lt;o oold OH . · In conformity to the
Section line intereecta the Dr•wlnga 1nd SJMclfica·
oF &amp;toto,...,.. U48: tiona prepered by the office
thonco In • SouthN1torly dl· of Marr Kn1p'p Cr1wfi1, A•
recdon foltowtng the fM- sociltM, Inc. 104 Folr l'ove.
andtrlngl of . IOid Stltl NE. P. 0 . 8o• 380. N-PM·
edolphlo, Ohio 44113.
1 Care! of Thankl.
o ..wtn91 and Speclflco-

'

5,000 TO 29,000
('"'-"'1 SAU PIICID

Tho Boord of Education,
Southern L~at School Dis·
the right to waive any infer-

lowing thl "'"""""""' of
tho 10me to tho ploco ~~ 1&gt;1-

getting rough,

CO MPLETE
STOREWIDE SALE

quirements as to conditions

KeriCftnik, P.O. Bolt 339. JoMph E. Thoren , Pretident
Hlghwoy:
Tupt&gt;OH Plaino. Ohio 46783,
Oonnlo E. Hilt, Troosuror
ro tho line of Eftlo Get· Wll oppointod Speciot Ad· j7) 10. 14. 21 . 28 , 4tc
man ond Okoy Gormon: · mlnistntor of tt,e •tete of 1 ---::.-~::-7.-:-:-::---llerthl Coole. dece•od. r.to
Public Notice
ro tho top
ot olong
tho Nitu!dtiM
on thl of S&lt;;ipio Township. Meigs I ___TfATiEM'EiififS- - tooutll-oFOuyon.-1 County, Ohio
Ch1rlea H. Knight,
- ' " ' lrM; lhllnco Wilt
ME II&lt;i5' 1CUI, .. L SCHOOL
Acting Probete Judge
llong tho Ntt obout 10 IMt
DISTRICT
Le na K. Neuelro.ed . Clerk
from tho top of tho NH folCombin•d Financial Report
171 28: 181 4, 11 ate
of the Board of Education

God aaw the road w8s

AIR COND!JIONERS

flied in OM ltlled envelope.

APPOINTMENT OF
matltloo ond to ,.ioct ony or
FIDUCIARY
111 bldl.
On July 23, 1987. In tho
BOARO OF EDUCATION
Molga County Probete Court.
of tho SOUTHERN LOCAL
C- No. 14.129. Jon P.
SCHOOL DISTRICT

28, '1986.

~LL

•uch propoul, nor unlnt

such propoNt ond bond are

trlct. AacjM, OH . r...rvea

NOTICE OF

' In loving memorY~~
Tony Fowler who
passed away July

$288°0

the propoNt. i1 fitld with

orly diroctlon olong llllld -

'

RANGE

propO•I ahell be invalid

··"
and not conoldlrlr\J
un to 11 1

Eitett of Erneet Gala of employment to M ob·
· fllewlun, Deceuecf Mrved, aafety requirements
and prevailing wage ratea to
7 , 4 2, 28 (.) 4 1 , •
I ) • • ;
• ' utc bo porld undlr tho conttoct.

In Memoriam

GAS 01 ELECTRIC

to 8nother bidder.

oholl .,. for Cllh, In fuM, 11 Ah.,..tivoo to ouch bond.
tho tlmo at till Nlo.
11 permitted by the generet
Sole lo subjoct to 1111 IP· Code of Ohio wilt be accept·
provol of the· Moitll Coumy ob!Anonilon of blddero ia
Probeto Court.
Morjorloo Miller, portlculortv coiled to the ra·

olong u!d Nne to the Stote

ANNUAL

SPRING AIR
BEDDING

Extracurricular
Activities , , ... 1 07,077 .j08
Clan Materials &amp;

Stall' of Ohio, ond • c~rront financial statement of
thl Suroty Com pony. The
Bondi shall .,. on the form
provided which bond shalt
be
CIM the cont!:c~~

3-11-tfn

·

TM1U JUlY

.,, CAll ANYnME
446·1311
.
7-&amp;-1 ....

No Suntlay Calh ·

noy lor tho hOndling agont. a

Said premltH.1.000.00.
must be

ment of the purohau money

lind J . C. Mltiocll; 1""'-

~

:::i'::a•a;:t=-

a" • •

Public Notice

County Deed Recorda.

ro tho fino of tendo
ownoct. by W. 0 . Chlmblr1

'5 00 CREDIT FOR W. VA. CUSTOMERS w 1 •2oooo PURCHASE

S31995

1'..,..n1
"11'11· Saki
Perc:el porcot
trl111gulor
shopld
ond
!loa In the N o - Carnor
of oold Soctlon-125.
Oood Alforonco: Votume
2,3. Page 733 , Melga
•

nolly ond J - 1 -ltolnoll•

.ern.

~-

Public Notice

rMnt

ond ducribld &lt;11 toHowo'
hginnlng on tho - • llno
.of Iondo of Mory A. Chembon obout to ·fMt -'II ot o

In a c rin\!n al trlal !'vcn If the evlde nc&lt;' wa s obt al ni:.&gt;d in a search that
viola ted th!' Individual' s co nstitulional right s ."
All lfla jor .-demogra phic groups ovt'm·helm lni':I Y s upported
Informing suspects of their ri~ ht s .
The sa me level or support dO&lt;'S not cx t!'nd to ·~~arc h es for evide nce.
Only .'15 percen t of Ohioans sa id ev ide nc.&gt; obtained In an
uncons titutiona l search should not be adm issible in court , while 6
percent said they had no opi nion.
The c urre nt prohibitions again st usi ng uncons tituti o nally o btained
ev idence In criminal trials rf'C&lt;' Ivl'd their s tronRcst support fr om
bl ack Ohi oa ns, a t 58 percent.
Among other de mographic s::roups, such as Re publicans and
De mocra ts or reside nt s of var iou s reg io ns of the sta te. tliere was
rl'la tlvl'ly little variation in the r es ponses .

$19900

a.::t=':.__
11-,_,:,.,"'r....-

the center of
Certificate from the Oepertlfl48 lnterMcta;:;~·l::=: ··~
of I n~u.rence authoriz~
boundary ttno- of
ing tho Surety Comporny to
•2• 10 tho p1100
t.-.a
do au,.ty Business in the

M . AoMrt•. Admlnl1tr1tor.

~"Evld e nc(' t hat proves th!' 111t lli of a suspect sho uld be adm issible

CHEST FREEZER

• ..,..-

••-

Chi-., Mro. A. M. Con-

TV's, VCR's, ~II Major Appliances, All Home Furniture

FISHER VCR

1. .-

'5:£!!~~..11!::: •
.,_____

.............

2••1 _,. . ., • .

You"// FJip D•er Tile Buys

WITHtl COUPON
Gotcl ltwv ~· I

PH. 949-2860.
or 949-2801

814·H2-2101 ld,..lort -112·

40"fo OFF ON WINDOWS

...,.,.pay

nn IUlCIIlltNG

''Free Eatim•tee' "

_..._

RoU1e #248to

1011, tnd bei~g o port of o
tract of fond formerly owned
by C. A. Ro.,.rto and dMded
to Htrrv Plck..,s by Av..-,

Respondent s to thr poll werp asked : " Pl eas£' t£'11 m&lt;' If you agree or
di sagree with th e following s tatl.'m c nt s ."
-·· Pollee should be required t.o warn a c rimina l suspect before
!nt e rro~atl on of the right to r'C maln s ile nt and to ha vp a lawyer."

$54400
GOOD COVEIS

SIDING CO.

QUilTS

TAYLOI IUUEIS

t\Nrii!Y\1
81 J i Ull ll S!Ill fl

W1 ralitfy • yao

9
Anttqu•Pr• 1140' • · c.JI•M.,c

Wt koow wltoro lito llttf it.
Wo oho k - lito pleco lor
lootct..lng ..d , .........

Now No- lullt

=-~·=

~~=

1l0WN IN

BISSELL

Public Notice

trect con....,ecl in thia deed
contain~ 11 ecrM. mor• or

Thr Ohio Poll. conducted by researc hers at th(' Uni vers it y of
Cin ci nna ti' s lnstltutp fo r Po!Jry R est'~ rc h . Is accura te to within
plus -or mlnu s-3 percent . A ra ndom .amp! &lt;' of 8H\ adu lts fro m
th rouJ&lt;hou t the s tat &lt;' wa s Interviewed bl' tween Apr,ll 23 a nd May 9 for
the poll released Monday .

'

=-~·

1

INSUlAnON

Jr:=:::;::;;::;::;===-~==.;~:;;::~~;:::::====·~·:'-==;;;;:::;:;::=:~=

lido o't Lot No . 138. ond 1 1
rodo oflthe-1 lido of Lot
No. 13S, SOC1iono 19 ond
24. T-n 3, Aonga 11 of the
Ohio Compeny' 1 Purchaao:
The foH-'"9 ducrlbld

However, al m os t 60 perce nt of the sta te' s residents sa id l'vldenee
ga ined by uncons(itu tiona l mra ns s hould st il l 1)1' ad missible' In' a
cri min a l t r ia l.

$49900

.,.

--ililt.
- -...
m:b.4..
~.

-PARCEL
-·- loltowo:
NUMBER 1:
tiling 21 ..,. aft tho Nit

CINCINNAT I ( UP I) - The la tes t Ohio Poll reports t hat a lmost nln P
in 10 Ohioa ns strongly s up port th e requirement that pollee officers
give crim inal s uspec ts the r ight to remai n Silent and havr a lawyer .
or the poll 's respond e n ts. 13 percent opposed these const itutional
rights and 2 pe'r cent had no op inion.

16 Cu. Ft. Frost Fr"

••

0

ClrtMif'«J P"P• eotter I he
J~llowin• t•l•plu.- Pdlti,.,.l,.,

c-

Ohioans supp:&gt;rt rights
of criminal suspects

FRIGIDAIRE

--

.._

NEAl, et 1l.,DEFENDANTS

STOP IN TODAY

ON SCIEEN PIOGIAM
4 IYINT • 14 DAY

1 1!1A...

:::: ... ::·:

COMMON Pt,EAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROlATE OIVIIION
MARJORIE MILLER.
AS AOMtNtSTRATR!X
OF THE ESTATE OF
ERNEST GALE NEWLUN,
DECEASEO.
PLAINTIFF

DUE TO .
TREMENDOUS
SUCCESS HELD
OYER TILL AUG.. 1

$)9995

·--________ _
..-......-...

.... _.,. · ·.:.-·
__.. :~:: ::;::: ::.: :::
:-.=.."'
filATil

hldgo _
, .....h
olong tho line of MIIY A.

ANNUAl

----1

VIfiYL SIDING
• ALiJMINUM SIDING
0

HELD

19" COLOR TV
Break out of your .
· job today! Train In
fields that provtde more than mtnimum wage: boring
work; irregular hours; no opportunity for advance~ ·
ment. sac offen courses in:
•MICROCOMPUTER/DATA PROCESSING
•EXECUTIVE SECROARIAL
•ACCOUNTING
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
tMEDICAL OFFICE SECROAIY
•SECIOAIIAL
.
•JUNIOR ACCOUNTING

Elephants topple zoo
walbi lor procreu
LOS ANGELES (UP. I) -Two
of the world's biggest consljrllctlon workers were called on to
demolish the children's area at
the Los Angeles Zoo to make way
lor a mafe modern $7 mi!Jton
dev elopment.
A pair of Asian elephants Annette a nd Topsy - knocked
over the walls of the la st
remaining struci ure In the original children's zoo on Monday.
The area will reopen in la te 1988
as Adventure Isla nd, zoo officia ls ·
said.
The $7 mll!lon developme nt,
funded mostly by grants by local
foundation s, w!ll Include so me
lam !liar family ac tivities as well
as high-tec hnological additions.
"It' s a whole different ap·
proach to Childre n's zoos.~· said
Warren Thomas, zoo direc tor.
''It Isn't just an Inert display you
walk around. It l!ves."
Among the plans for Adventure
Island ' s 2% acres are a petting
zoo, a tldepool , a new nu rsery
and interact ive di splays using
video a nd computer technology .
'They saw the light'
SOUTH PADRE ISLAN D,
Texas (UP!) -A single bea m of
. light guided a private boa t to lour
s hrim pers who abandoned their
sinking trawler a nd bobbed in the
s tormy Gu lf of Mexico for 90
minutes.
"The thing that saved us was

Business .Services

INGELS FURNITURE COMPANY

Gocyac hev called relat!ons between the Unite d Stat~s and the
Soviet Union a " highly complex "
problem and said the siste r -c it y
arrangement was a!med .at foster ing better superpower
.
.ties.

Ad ·JS
for people
who hate
get up for

.

Quirks· in the news
By United Pre8s International
. '

The

Ohio

iELL CONSTRUCnON
Gonerel

RACINE, OliO

c..tncten

Wontod to

buy :

UNd Mobilo

Hom•. Coll814-448-0175.

nn-1110 c• from prtv•t•

own••· Mutt bo In good cond.
Call 814-•4&amp;-3378.
Buying "dilly gold, 1Hwr coins.
rint•· jeweky, sterling Wire, old
colnt, llt'lt• currency. Top pri~
c•. Ed lurltatt Barber Shop,
2nd. -Ave. Mktdleport, Oh. e 14·

992-3478.

.

21

8usinoss·
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUILIIH-

ING CO . recommanch thlt you •
do bualnna wfth people you
know, 1nd NOT to lend moniW' '
through the! m•H untl you hiVe
invnt6g~ed t"- offeMg.

lr-

Opportunity for loft Ftoieh'
Yogurt Store. Complwtw '-r~
Wanted to buy, etandlngtin1b.r.
Cell AI Tromm a1 114-742· , order a11lst8n~ and tqulpe.,..
232a .
-~~~·No
to.. lite
.ov•~'"· Call304-422.f1410.

'

�-

,Ju~v.

July 28. 1987
BORN LOSER

Pomeroy-Middleport.

Television
Viewing

.

'j W~ F1~1~ 1 Tb %L.~ lJ.\1'?
WATCM

"tlol~
•
·'
..•

For Sale Soft Serw lc• Cream
machine and mini donut ma·
chine. Both eKe cond. 304-8963599.

31

'

Homes for. Sale

Lovety new 3 BR home buih this
spring. 2 c~r g••g•. nice •••·
Clay &amp; city1chools, I miles from
Gallipolil. Will consider mobile
home •• trade-in. 147,500. Call
61 4 -... 6 · 8038.

I~
I

Three BR Hou•e fof Rent on Rt.
588. Coli 614-446-1301 .
l

Good River View in town. Built

•

Call• Only9370.
Price reduced. Call
614-388·
4 BR . home'" R10 Grande now
rfinted. •aoo a month-846,000.
Bud McGhee Reahv· CaiiiS14446-0612 .
Brick home for sale. total
electric. 3 BR ., 1 V:z M.ths, ulitity
room. and garage. Call 814441-0722 .
4 rm house and lot -46Net1Ave ..
Gallipolis. 19,000 or make otter.

• .,

I

7 -A

!

2 BR h0'\'0 on oppn&gt;,;meteiy 6
""" N- vinyl siding. g..oge, ·
bern, basement, attic. S•ious

~__.

.

~

"Buddy' can you spare some
ms'!'de intio-nnatl'on?"

36 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 21
• 10 OOO R 2
·
acres. • •
· t. '
-Hickory Chapel Road, 304-675420B.

Rent~ls
41

Houses for Rent

44 ' Apartment '
for Rent
Garage Apt .. 2BR .. Adultsonly.
No pets. 322 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis. Ohto Call614-446-3748 or
266-1903
Nice 2 BR , apt .. stove, reh1g .•
waltr. furnished. 4YJ m1lnfrom
Gallipolis. 1210 a moqth. No
pets Cell 814-446-8038

Ninty furnished smell house.

Adults onty . References reQuired Off street parking. Ph.
614-44c;, -0338

Nicely furnished, 2 BR. apart ment. Nice location. Adults only.
Ctll614-446-2404.

Kitchen fu_rnished, carpeted: 2
BR. 1% bath, no pets • . Dep. &amp;
Ref. 233 Second Avenue.
$350 / mo. pus utilities Call
614-446-4926

Upstairs. unfurn. apt Good
location. Utilities pd.. Adults
Oepos. Call 814-448-1457 af·
tar 3 :30PM .

6 room house. tWo baths. new

roof. Nunah window1, garage.
248 N . Fourth Ave. Middleport.
Make otter. 114 - 247~ 4872 or
614-247-2532 .
4 bedroom home. 1 Yt bath.
. Garage Located on Gra\lef Hill.
770 Ash St. Middleport.
One mile out Foglesong, Rd.
Mason . 2-tiedrooms, front
room, kitchen, bath, carPeted.
3.15 ecres. 304-773-501 1 .
2 bedroom houM at 212 Park
Orhte Aluminum siding. new
windows, garage enclosed to
make family room or extra
bedroom. Priced to sell Call
304-576-2768 .

SiK room house on 8 acres.
Llet\ling Road. Owner will fi·
nance. 814 - 742 · 226~ .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS , RT 35.
PHONE 6U-446 -7274.
1978 3 SR . 14x70 Buddy
Mobile Home with 12x32 addi·
t1on with wood burner. Owner
MUST Sell. Best offer Call
614-441-8427 after 5.30 PM
1970 Kit 2 BR . Mobile Home.
12~~:65 . Call614.-446-2903 .
Several handyman specio•ls .
Tens. Twetves. and Fourteens
from 81995. Kanauga Mobile
Home Sales, Kanauga. Ohio
614-446-9662
1973 Boardmoore 14•63, 2
8R . 1 bath. CA .. partly fur nished. good condition. Call
614-245-5031 after 6 00 PM .

8 (oom house 876 per month. 8
rOom hoUse t171 per month. Pt. Pleas, Call Broker A-1 Real
Estete 304-675-5104.
3 bedroom On 'Lincoln Heights
in Pomer'oy. Phone 614-992 7689 aher 15 :00 p.m .
2 bedroom house overiOQklng

park in Middleport . Call 1514 992-2598.

2 bedroom. W-D hook-up, besemeht Clean. Quiet locstion.
adults-seniors preferred. 1 or 2 !For rent Efficiency cottage, Mt
r children. No pets. Reference. Vernon Ave. Pt. Pleasant. Hud
$166-$196 month plut deposit. approved. 1514-992 -5858.
A'llallable immediately 614 ·
One bedroom apt. ln M1ddlepo1t
992-5597.
*175. per month. Call614·992·
New 3 bedroom ranch house 6763.
with large fenced in yard, total
electric. •aso per month. Lo- Two bedrooin apt. in Middleport.'AII utilities paid. $210. per
ca~ed on Rt 160, 7 miles from
Holzer Hospital No inside pets. month .. Call614·992· 6763 ·
Referenc. required Available
Sept . 1 . Call 614-388-9765 APARTMENTS. mobile home1,
houses. Pt. Plnsantand Gallipo~fter s·oo p m.
lis. 614-446-8221 .
House for rent in Portle!'ld, Ohio
Completely renovated, total 2 bedroom furnited apt , ref and
electri::, cenrral air. he~ pump, depoSit. New Haven, W. Va ,
plenty of yard and garden space. 304-882 -3217 or 304-7734 mi. from Ravenswood. 614· 5024 .
843-5309 .
3 rooms· and bath. gas heat.
Si111 room house. Fairview Road, ground floor, washer and dryer
Camp Conley t226 per month. hook up. no children. Immediate
occupancy. No pets. phone
304 675 -137.1 or 675-3812 .
304-675-4480 e.11t 53 or 60.
2 bedroom house Krodel Park
ReferenceS Required . 304-8715- Apt S1 99. per month plus
utiliti01 . Ref. 6 small deposit
1861 after 5:00.
required. 304· 773-9694 .
3 bedroom house, 205 N Me1n
"
3 bedroom apt Gallipolis Ferry.
St . 304 -675-172 I
304-675-5421
3 bed room house irl Henderson,
W. Va 1275.00 month. call
45 Furnished Rooms
614-446 ·9882 .
Rooms for renJ, day . week.
month Gallia Hotel. Call 614446-9580 Rent as low as8120
month
Furnished room. 876 . Utilities
paid Share bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gailipolis. Call
446-4416 after 7pm.

Nice 3 BR .,Mobile hama in R1o
Grande. Caii&amp;U.-245-5152 .

46 Space for Rent

Price reduced. 12•70 Windsor
with e111pando. 2 bedrooms,
56,900. Call 304-675-6965 .
Must Sell 1971 New Moon
12x56 turn Asking $4,000.
304-882-3303

Furnished 3 BR Mobile home on
Upper At . 7. wa1er paid. $210 a
month . Call614-245-5818 .
2 BR mobile ~ome in country
$150. month plus deposit Call

33

Farms for Sale

M1n1 Farm. 9 6 acres. 6 rooms.
bath full basement. Small barn.
1 out building. Bashan Rd.
Meigs Co. 825,000 614-3786209.
20 acre farm Hannan Trace
RoMI. Glenwood. W. Ve. for
more mformation caU JD•· 7735118 or 773-5188 after 5:00

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Stores,
offices. A-One Re1t Estate.
Carol.. Yeager. Broker . Call304-.
675-5104 .

35._ lots

&amp;

Acreage

1 .84 acfel. nice flatland .
Conven. location. Call81•·4467627.
60 acrd, 1 mile oft 110.
Between Porter a. Vlriton .
no.ooo. Colle14-441·8980-

3 BR tra1l8f in c1ty. Total elec .
CA . &amp;225 per man plus dep.
Coll614-256-6338 .
1 41165 Mobile home: 2 BR . lltl
on 1 acre land 2 ehildren
accepted 8165 per month plu1
utilities. $100 dep . Available
Aug. 1st. Call814-388:9881 .
Mob1le Home for rent . 2 br.
furn11hed 304 - 676 - 6~12

44

Apartment

I

,

PARSON 'S FURNITURE

New wood 6 pc. living room
suites, $398.95; New living

Freezer, upright good cond.
• ,7 5 . Box 219· E Col -Mercerville
Rd. Mercervi,lle,

Queeri SIZe waterbed with six
drawer pedestal. Call614-266·
6224.
Good used Color TV ' S. floor
models and portables for sale
Caii614 ·.W6-11'4 9.

for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent. Bet1c rent for 1 bdr.,
S183.00; 2bdr . S219.00 Al•o
required a 8200.00 security
deposit . CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dept. Ph 446-3997,
Equal Housing Opportunity

54 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan's Used Tire Shop Ower
1.000t.rH, si~es12 1 13, 14, 15,
16, 16 .5. 8 mil" OU1 Rt . 218.
Cell 814-251-1251 .
Plastic CIStern state approved.
plastic sept1c tanks, pl ..tic
cul¥erts. metal culver1s. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jackson. Oh. 614-288-5930.

51 Household Goods

Heil 2 ton edd on central air
conditioner wlih thermostat
1500. Cell 614-992 -5628 or
614-992 -5916
Maytag washer and dryer tor
sale 4 yrs. old. Used very httle.
814-992-67871fter 5 :00p.m

Pets ~or Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
ttyiH. Julie Webb Ph. 614-4480231
Dr-..onwynd Cattety K•nnet
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Siamese kitten1 . AKC Cbow
·puppies New kiHena; Si•mese
and Himalayans Call 61 • ·441·
3844 after ?PM .
Red male Dachs"und, 'Cell614367 -0581 .

---'-----Blonde male, 8 mas old, Cocker
Sp1niel. Ca11614·266·8224.
AKC Golden Retriever•. Champion bloodline. R1111dy after Aug.
15th Shots and worm~ . Call
after 5:00PM, 114 ·446 ·6641 ,
AKC Boston Terriers. Call 114258-9354
For aale: American Eakjmo Spitt
puppy-10 wks. old, female. pure
bloOdline. no papers t75. 814992 ·2073.

Musical
Instruments

58

&amp;

Fruit
v,getables

Peaches
Yellow FrM Ston~.
Pick your own, I 10 a bushel or
11 .00 Pef !5 lb. Open I ~lVI a
week. Cloled Sunday. R.lynot'
Peac:h Orch•rd, 6 mil" b..ow
Gl.lllpolit, Ohio. C11l 61 . ......
4807.
FreNet" corn : S1lver OuHn. 10
doz. or more-$1 .00 a dol .
Gla11burn's Farm M.,ket· St
Rt . HSO, n11ar Po.. er Call
114-388· 9027.
Half Runn•. Horticultur• and
Blue Ltlke Beanl, $12 bushel.
Sil\ler OUHn and Senacca Chief
Corn. Call814-742 ·2322 .
Canning tomatoH. Letart Falls,
Oh1o. Harry Hill. Bring QW~~rn
container

Silver c:iueen sweet corn wholesale. call 304-878-1288.

Electrolux Vacs A-1 cond .
Clesns a runs like new. 178.
cash or terms arran9ed 304675-4416.
'
BOO used cement blocks. 304·
882 ·3236.

Furnished epartment. 1210.
utilities paid. 1 bdr. 920Fourth.
Gallipolis Call 448-4411 aher
8pm .

2 s11H horse tnll•- *BPI. Alto.
Tandem 20 tt. hey trall•.t985.
Call11 • -245·6223 .

1183 , Chevette Standard. 4
speed, in goOd cOnditiori
41.000 mile~ . 132 lun•,nut.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

165 MF Dinel tT•ctor. •3tl0.
n2 MF bolor.l1110. 7ft, NH
hayblhd. $150. 200 gaiOnapray
t1nk. 1215. Call 614·28&amp;8522-

Pl. PI, AC . goodshap•. 11250.
814-812-8804 .

1981 Dodge Omni 12' Miser.

1882 ford Exp, PS . PB. air,
AM · FM . ''-'" roof . leether.
•2000 cash. Call t,4. J88 t7111fter a p.m.

800 Ford tractor. t27&amp;0. 241
ln,•n.tlonll found baler- like
new. 13250. International herv
conditioner. ·1296. Gr indef'·
1185 Ford Esc.,t, LDw mil-.ga.
Mlaer, •e&amp;o Call 814-281· · excellent
condition. 2 door,
6.22 .
•3100 cnh . 114 -388-9755
.,..,
a p,m.
.
444 lnt~Honal gas · tractor
with liYt P.T.O. end live lift. 1173 ChrvshM" Newport. 400c., .
Priced ~r qu_k:k tell. $1995. Day , lri engine. Bought New . Kept in
call 814· 7•2-2211 . NiliJht call tiiCellent co nd itl'o n, E.-:haust
systtm one month old. Motoi
114· 992-&amp;487 .
and transmlufon good, Good
1 980 MISteY hrguson 120 16rea. Busted r•ar 1ender. Make
bolor for Mit $1900. 114-247· OH• Call 304·875 ·•138 or
304·195·3001 '
3972 .

77 MOB 1600. Soe ot 2109
Jtff•aon Aw Pt . Pl .

9N Ford tractor with new 4ft .
bru•h hog . Runt good . 814593-8524 . Atlton1: OhiO.

1B77 fOfd LTD Landeu. good
eoftd. caU 304· 816·4014 .

Bara. chains. and sproclet• to fit
.. lmost •flv saw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO .. H•nderton.
W. Vo. 304-171-7421 .

Flot X19. 31.000 IIIIIH.
13.200.00 or bOlt otter. 304·
676·M14 .
1980

Speci• on New Ho• .nd Hay
tools {cath deals) . Two Mod..
251 . 8 '1, It rollN. *2.200 00.
One Model 211, 8\? ft rHewtth
dotty whHII. 12.400.00. Two
Modet 472., 7 ft heybinn.
16.9&amp;0.00 One Mod .. 47,, 7 tt
hoybloo•• 1.400.00. r-"'odol
488 . 9 It hoyblno. 11,800.00.
One Modo! 4119. 9 It hoyblno.
17,&amp;00.00. Ono Modo! 30,
1000 RPM blower, 12.950.()0.
One Model •12. disc mow•r.
$3,4150,00 , keefer1 Setvlce
C•nttr . St . R1 . 87 Point
PleMent. fUpiay Rold. Phone
304-895-3e74.

1912 OodveColt, 11100. 104 ·
..2·2111 .
' 7'5 Ford LT0 1 good cond.
304·89&amp;·39&amp;5.

72

62 Wanted to Buy

I ,lr 111 SUIII 1111·:;
,1;

L1:eolor:k

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS. SONS
U. S. 36 West. Jadt1on. Ohto.
114-288-6451 .
Mauey Ferguson. New Hollsnd.
Bush Hog Saln 6 Service. Over
· 40 used trscton to chooee from
It complete hne of new &amp; used
equipment Largest 1electlon in
S E Ohio.
Utility bldg: 27' x38 ' .119' - 13' x8 '
track door &amp; 3' walk door.
144•4 erected ~ Iron HarM
Bldgo 614-332·9746 .
For Sate: Int. 454. low hrs .. Int .
No . 27Hav~oler Cell814-256·
1818 aft•r e ·oo PM .

live1tock

1112 Ptymouth Arrow Pid.-utt:
Manual ah1fl, lfK)rt 81um6nutn
whM11. sun •oof: AM -FM ••erao
Clal-te. 83.000 rnllft. QUOd
condition. UIOO Call 614 ,
882-3489 .

i. 1978 Vohlo ,SW. v*Y goad

--~-------

Duroc Boars Bred julf like the
boars we t"ted at th• Ohio
TestaHon tt"tet g-'ned o.,... 2 I
lbl. P8f dey. Rqe• ltnttev.
Soblno. 011. 51 3-584-239a.
Tenn, Walktts . 12 yrs nld Mare,
3 y'r o.tding. and 2 yrt otd,
1300.00 • ...,.,. 304-185-3811 .

64

Hey

&amp; Grain

Tr ,Jns pori .Jt lfl il
Autos for Sale

1983MalibuW~n . AC ., Auto ,

AM-FM .Con .,73.000 milo ~
Roof Cerrltt. Aaking •3700
Call 814-448-1211 .
1977 Gran Pria. maroon with
sUnroof. $100 or bnl off• Call
before .4 PM 304-175-2425.
1983 Clta1ion XS Sport Sharp
12795. 1884 Dodge Colt. Llko
new. 12781. Coli 114-281·
1522.

1977 C-11 ChfYY dump truck.
120 tWes, 5 speed trlr'ltml•aton.
2 spMd ••Ia. 1•.100. 10•· •&amp;81031 .

·-

Vans

&amp; 4

W .O .

1981 JeepJ ·10 truck. 4•• . new
tranam!Sston. 82. 200 or bes1
off... 304-882-25t2,
1981 Ford Blazer 4-4. power
steer1ng. power brakaa. • .~~~eel­
lent condition. 20.000 mtl••ptus tour new lftDunted bud•hot
muddera, •1 .&amp;00. 304· 372 ·
9493.

74

Motorcycles

1984 Honda &amp;hodow 700.
Excel . Cond . Menv auras.
Rricild to tall CaH 114· 4M·
9814.

1185 Honda Shadow 500. low
miiiiQe . Cendv Apple
Rld . • 1495 . Call 814 - 387 7410

Extra c.le•. one owner. 1978
Buick Century, ,14 dr. 3015, full
power: ateerlng. brak81, windows: aeau• .trunk. AM-FM
red~. lilt. Nke new tires. 11500
FIRM . Colll14·448-01141.

1911 Honda Oirt•lik• CRIO·
11111 new. 1978 Motorcycle. GT
80 Y1maha Call 114-388 8721 .
1910 · &amp;50 Suzuki. runs good.
looks good. •aoo or be11 oftet.
Call 614-388-8476.

.'88 Hond•A•be12150, exc . con d.
IBID. 304·875· 7471

1980 MX:175 . good cond.
1300.00. 304·175·1116
1981 Y.mahl 250 Exciter.
3.000 mloo. 304-171-2007.
1979 Plow:mouth Horizon, new

Furnished efficiency, 701
Founh Ave. •1&amp;0 utllitlea pd.
Coll614-~l -4411oftor 8pm .

Frftzer 't or ul• upright model·
Lazarus brand- 1150. Celll14·
441-4412 between 7·8 pm or
446-4741-

1 BR apt. 740 8~n4 Ave.
$181 per month 1 Depoalt , .
qulrtd. Colll14-441-4222 betwaen 9 I. B.

· Four ptect. full !Mzt. white
canopy bedroom wH:e. • 400.
Coli 304·8B2·2388o '

3 ' pc br-loot nook. 42•30
teblt end 2 upholstered
benchu. 175.00 . 304·8711875.

•1.00.

1977 Plymouth Volare, •318
engine. good work c•. 1400.
1957 Ford F-100. plollup- 223
engine. ••d. trana .• needl
work. •100. 1814 Rom•tationwagon, 119 engln1.
12.1500 actual mll81, need1
some work. •100. · Call 114·
38~-8308.
••

GOOO U&amp;EO APPLIANCES
W•h••· .dryers. refriaerltors.
ranges, Skagg1 Appliences.
Upfl• River Ad. b"kte Ston1
Creal Motol. 114-441-7381.

1879 Pontiac Bonnevlle. 2 ctr .•
illl(;.! cond. Call 814·387·0:,97
after II !00 PM.
ltalnl•• ltHI uhMII1 aystema.
Now cultorn made fOr your
trUck. motor hom. Of ct. . kt car.
W~h 111..11"1o worronty. Mumor
'Motl, I Stlmpoon A.... Atltono.
Dhlo. 1-800·143·3717.

do you
whl!n you take the
cut-rale package !our? ... "
(

'

------------.---.J-.----,__ ·--·-

·-~--

.-

1871 Pontloc Trono Am. Bloc:lt
wkh .gold t~m. T-1-. Outltlndlng CIDl'ditlon.
oao. Collen. 7•2·31 H .

a.

•••oo.

Dor,PT '(OU f?EAP Tt-l~
r"EWfPAPE~&gt;, 8Ut:&gt;PY?
.

197 i Sur c r·aft Folddown
Camper. sleeps 8, furn•ce.
coolrtop. sink. Nlca 1900 or
belt offer. 1980 Honda tr1il
bike. lib nii'W 1400 or best
offer , Coli 814 -44t.0978 _

:r.

Sh .. ta· 11 ft . Camper. new

~ Wo~~ING

WITHIN THE .$'(STEM!

tlrH, Eac ... c ond 197' Chevy
'" ton Pid!.up wfth tQPP• Call
114-2&amp;8-8898 .

1

21 ft . ctmp.,., Tendem whe- J,
ulf· cont•lned, full b•th. awn·
in,, sleep, s l• Good condl1k)f'l
13200 Collll4 - 915 -4~18
1973 St•rcr-ah c:amP'Jf, 21h..
.. If eont.tned. 12 .800 .00. 304·
812 ·21,81,

Home
Improvements

UncondiUo11.t llf~ frri• vu•;•n1H. Loul fefertncet furn llh",
Fr" fttfm•tet Call cOitec:t ' •
1·614-237·04ea . ...... ftlghl.
Rooer•B• •• m•nt
'tf lltfpr()OfiftQ.

EEK &amp;

MEEJ(
~

SWEEPER 1nd Iewing. machine
rltPair. pens. and t~.tppties. . Plell
up and d ..iverv. Da"ia Vtcuum
Cl .. ner . o,• half mUe up
O.orgn Cr.- Rd. Call 114441·0294

snu.. HA\.C A FWJ

5LIC£5 U.fT, 'SIR

,,

1rN stump rlmoval. ston e,
mulch . tOp iQfl, av•r1 rean
1hrubs, bag worm apray;ng.
Don' s Landtc..,tt Call t14·
441·9141,

•

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
' iQiv\ORRCW COULD BE A
OAN6E:RCU9 DA-Y FOR YOU.

"KEEPAWAY FRO'YI THREE:LE~EDcriRN'F£5 WITH I.ONG

'

Kowoookl 280 LTD. •eoo.oo.
• - cone!. 304-112-2417.
Yameha XT 100 I, t&amp;tiO.OO.
304-175·3110.

76
Boats end
_ Motors for Sale
1111 24 fl, Pon1oon ftoatboat,
70 KP Evenrude motor. t,.u.,,
LOii-EJCtraL See n OalllpoNI
Boll Club. Co11114·oi46·4782.

Uko

now H ft. 1181 Aquo,
CNIM Pontoon hOuoolloot. I I
HP -cury -ord. • 1100.
Aluml!'um laea loaf riQ. 70 HP
Johnton motor. trail•. 'Mercury
trolling motor1 ......edllv' w.ll,
uatd. •3800. Call Zinno Landing
114-448-7044.
12' •••• v·bottom -.umlnum
boll. •uo. Coli 304·17~·
1518.

•

THATS SA.&lt;OIERS&lt;I.ID
i'HAN DONE.

GREEN HAIR AND WEARING-

Star"-s Tree and l1wn Ser¥i4;-~t.
lawn care, landsuplng. stump
rernonl. 30• · 516 · 284 2 or
57t· 2903

PURPLE UOG&lt;:t-ING

L

5HQt5_"

'

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

BARNEY '

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND H£ATING
Cor . Fourth snd Pine
G•llipolit. Ohio
Phone 114-44•· 3888 or . , ..
441-4477
'

THIS

&amp;

IS YORE

HOMEWORK?

~~:;::=:=·'
84

the
be·
low to form four sirnple words

l

N U R U_S E

li

l

C'liLLI

~----..:1:...:.;....1::,.r.:-.1
! ;...-JI

' ~'·--.:.l~~rl

.-:K:,I.:.:.R_,NIHI

•

~;.!
·•

"RPme'T'ber dear," said the
sweet old !lady, "the things you

~===~:;~~~~think

ara the most Important in
your life
things. "

,..

I1

TROENI

\

kc-,!
-T-1-TI~r~~~176 --1 ft
5
V

Complete lhe ' "uckle quo1ed
by fil ling in the missing words
l_~..l.-.L._L_L.J.-...1 you develop from step No 3 below

YEsTERDAY'S SCI~iiif ANSWEIS .
Yearly -

Water.-

Shirk - Larder - HAIR FREE

Baldness wa9 mentioned in the presence of an associate,
whose head reflectad the sun. He rasponded, "People like me
refer to it as 'HAIR FREE'. "

BRIDGE
High-level
bidding

.

. NORTH
• K 762

-- -

+AKJ8o
+A J 8 2

·By James Jacoby

EAST
Even expert players have ·difficulty · WEST
• Q J 10 ~ 4 3
+9
Benson
bidding when the opponents interfere. • A87
• K Q J 10 9 o 43 ·
111 (Z) Star Trek
Suppose you 'have opened the bidding. +74
• 10 9 2
7:05 (l) Sanford and Son
Your left·hand opponent overcalls at +K3
' the one-level and the bidding is passed
7:30 D CD (JJ Newlywed Game
SOUTH
(!) Bast ol Bill Dance
· around to .you, What does it mean if
•As
Outdoors (A)
you now double? Traditionally it
01]) Judge
2
means that you have a good hand but
• Q6 3
liD) Wheel ol .Fortune 1;1
' that you do not believe you c{ln , set
... Q 10 9 7 6.
(!)I Cro11flre (0:30)
, your opponent without help from part1111121 IUl Jeop11rdyl Q
Vulnerable: Neither
ner, You suggest to partner that your
. ®Soap
Dealer: North
side can play in oue of the unbid suits
7:35 (l) Major League Baseball
and that you may have extra values
Sooth
Nortb
8:00 CD Daktari
. for your opening, but you do not want ' Wesl
Pass
D CD IUl Matlock Matlock
· to defend against a low· ievel doubled
Pass
Pass
Dbl.
gets a second ch6nce a1 a
Pass
Pass
Pass
lost case with a former client. i contract unless your partner has
1ie~gth and strength in the overcaUer's
(A)
1 SUI!.
Opening lead: • A
(!) Proleutonal Karate In
Suppose the ~idding .has· zoomed to
(JJ 0 I]) Who's the 'Boit?
Tony's larcenous father in
the stratosphere, as in today's deal . . 1.,--,-,----r.-======~
l~) Ae1s out of lhe slammer_ North who ·opened one diamond, then should pass and hope to make· a smalt
doubl~ East's four hearts. Wbat profit. What a double by North at this
(!J (fi) Nova Clyde Snow and
should South do? The answer is based level should show is support for spades
others are documenting 1he
upon North's bidding tendencies at or clubs, the unbid suits, as well as a
fate of 1he disappeared. 1;1
'
such high competitive levels. Suppose sound opening bid _
liD) Ill 1121 Simon and Simon
North
had
the
same
high
cards,
but
That
was
the
bidding
philosophy
of
AJ and Rick insist that .
with two or three little hearts replac· South, and he believed that North
Towner stiy with them while
ing some of lils other cards. Would be shared that view, so he bid .six. clubS:,
his leg heals. (A)
ll2l Prlmenaw• Wrap 'ups of
double? My answer is that he should Hos trust of partner was ~ond~ca~,
the day·s world news and in
not. With a balanced. hand, even with . since the contract came rollmg m WJih':.
depth feature reports. (1 :00)
extra values for his opening bid, North , an overtrock when the club fmesse
IBl MOVIE: McO iPGi (1 :56)
~. ~
succeeded.
Ill(!) MOVIE: Dilly Harry (R)
~&amp;Vv
(1 :42)
8:30 [II flJ I]) Growing Pains
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Jason delivers a baby in a
ACROSS. 42 After
~lane, and Mike must assist.
1 Bark fiber 43 Jacket
(A) 1;1
.
,
5 Damse I
style
.9:00 CD 700 Club
D (]) 1DJ MOVIE: 'Malta
9 Paris
DOWN
Princess' Tuetday Night at
suburb
1 CashthtMovlee
. register
10 Arizona
(!)Top Rank Boxing ·
''
city
word
(i) CJ I]) Moonlighting
Maddie and David ere led
II Lacerate 2 Sports
ir)tO dangerous international
12 Meanirig
setting
lntrlg_ue_(A) 1;1
14 Some
3 Shilly·
(!J []) South American
Journey This episode •
15 Greek "T"
shally
explores lhe S. American
4 Scottish
16 River
. soul by profiling 3 celebrllies.
'·
(
Sp.)
seaport
®I ill1121 Houtton Knight•
Mismatched plalnolot~es
17 Fall behind 5 Madagascar 13 Steeple 28 Paddle
police officers form uneasy
18 Go wrong
mammal
15 Golf term 30 Bedeck
•
partnership_ (A) 1;1
;19
Playing
6
Electrical
21
Grassy
32
Jargon
1!11 Lerry King Llvel In depth
, marble
term
land
33 Heavy
ln1ervlews with top
newsmakers and celebrities.
20 Athena's
7 Boxing
22 My (Fr.)
with cargo

•s

,.

6+

.

RON ·s lele"i• lo n 54trw lc• .
HouM e~a1ts on RCA, Ouanr,
GE . Speci .. ing tn Ztmrth. Call
304-571 239e or 614 -446 ·
2454.

B;!

letters of
0 Rearrange
fou r 1crombled words

--•etf'

BASEMENT
WATfRPROOFINO

Bulldint &amp; remodaling. room
addition•. rO(IIflAg, t•v ot.~t . level·
lng , aiding. bathroomt, concrate, ehtctrh;al, drywall. plumblne . 304-175-3713.

ld~od ~r

+4

..
HOW MANV 'TIMES
HAVE I TOLQ YOU
To BE NEAT

I NEVER
SEEN SUCH

MESSV

AN' TIDY'?

WRITIN'!!

Electrical
'Refrigeration

Res.dential o r commercial Wlr·
ing. New '18f'VICe or repairs
Licensed electrician . Estimate
free Ridenour Electrical, 304875-1786

10:(!,0 (i) 0 I]) Spenser: For Hire
or hockey 23 Palm off 38 New
title .
Spenser is forced to work
:22
Wee
bit
8
Arranged 24 Minimally
Guinea
w1th one of Rota 's ex lovers:
:23 Renown
in· series
27 Dinah
town
(A) C
.
(!J War: A Commenlllry by
:25 Sunday 10 Crown
of song 39 For shame!
Gwynne Dyer Follow the
: punch
development of the arms
(sl.)
race to tod~ 's nuclear
stalemate. Q
26 Great
illl ®Newt
.
Barrier
1!11 Evening New• A wrap up
Island
of today's news and a look
27 "They're
ahead to tomorrow·s n'ews
stories_11 :00)
Playing
1!1) (Z) Soap
Our-"
10:151]) MOVIE: ThemltNRI (t:34) .. · 29 They (Fr)
10:30 I]) Celebrity Chell
·30 Surprise!
l[lJ Moneymaker•
31 Building
fJI (!) USA Tonight
,
extension
11:00 I]) Hardcastle and
1I 34 Stitch
McCormick ·
ern
m (IJ ®I 1111!11
,35 June
il)) Newl
·
beetle
(!J Sign 011
36 Rome's
l[lJ War: A Commentary by
, Gwynne Dyer Follow the
-Veneto
development of the arms
37 Caesar's
race to tod~'s nuclear
"sartor"
stalema1e. 1:;1
a:J1 Moneyllna Current
39Ward off
reports on world economics
40 Look '
and financial news wl1h Lou
·41
Stop"
Dobbs. (0:30)
: playwright
® Taletlrom ttoa Dlrkslde
Florence Bravo
work it: rra~
fJI (Z) Love Connection
11 :30 D (]) IUl Tonight Show
(!) Sport.Center (L)
.
lsLONGFELLOW ·
.
· (i) WKRP In Clnclnnlti
One Jetter stands for another. In this sample A IS used
D I]) Nlghtllne 1;1
for
t.hree L's X for the' two O's, etc. Single letters,
®I Trappar John, M.D.
(!)I Sparta Tonight Action
apostrophes, the iength and
of the words are all
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber. 1 hints. Each day the code letten are different.
(0:30)
.
•
CRYPTOQUOTE
181!11'T.J. Hooker' CBS Lllhl i
Night HOOker goee
7-28
undercover to bust 6
dangerous Chicago drug
RQITDUPCU
T M U
U B K
supplier. (R)
i1J Treppar John, M.D. A
Piece of the Action
RM
U B R C 0
(Z) Late Show '
i 2:00 CD Bums lnd Allen
APC
FTG
R X
(!) SportaLook (A)
BTCKMUF.

w

'

"Bus

B5

General Hauling

3 \Vhool .. Bicycle. Coli 114448-3158.

82 Hondalllv•rWinglnterstete.
4100 muu. 304-773-5930.

VaHey Furniture. new &amp; used.
Large section of quality furni ·
ture . 1216 Eutern Ave . .
G11iipolls.

FRANK AND ERNEST•

Rotary or c abla 1oo1 ~rilling
Mo•t well1 completed sameda,.
Pump sales a,d sflf'Yice 304 895-3802

C1U

WOlD
GAMI

i

79 Motors Home•
Campers

1978 ford F-250 •••
114-441-3413 .- '

1980 Citetlon- new 1ires 1983
Ply Reliant Statiohwagon,AC .,good cond. Coli 114·3177225.
' '

Coll814-441· 0981.

Struts. 1119. 95 p1it . .lnstafl.,d .
Most models. Mufflef Man. 9
Stimpson Avw, Athena , Ohio
, 800-843-37t7.

Fetty Tr•e Ttlmm.ny, •tump
removal Clll304 -&amp;76 -1331 .

For Sele: 2 Honda Motorcv...;
500 cc and 400 cc auto. • 1000
for both. Caiii1.J218; 0664.

tiret. ••labl•. autoftlaitic.

Auto Repair ·

1877 Chl'\l'yPic:tup trudl . $600.
Coll114-44d-8728 .

1986 Mere Lynll. 4 .eed.
AM -FM ·T•pe. .3499. John's
Auto Saln. BulevMie Rd. Gelh·
/&gt;olll. Ohio.
·

L•te model 650 uactor
·cockshut -4 new lirea- live ·· 1984 Ford Tempo. 4-dr .. auto.
27,000 milK. Coli 614-448power-3 pl. hitch. e1 , 660. John
Deere 8Ahtr, l880 John Deere e127.
Hay Binder. $7150. John Deere
Rake, $850 . Coli .114-286- 1974 Corveue Sting Ray ,
43.000 •ctual mllft. Excei8122."
.Cond. Cell814-441-17&amp;e.

2 BR . 2 beth. carpeted .. h:ltchen
furnished. no pets, dep. &amp; ref.
t32S/ mo. 11 Court St. Call
614-448-4928.

Brookside Apa;tments: 4461932 or 448-41539. One B•d·
room apartment with hMge
country ltitc'hen, n.w ipptian·
en. utility room. water, sewer
1nd trash nrvices, provided.
Quiet ar•a ..

cond. *2.100.00- 1877Ch... 4
whHI driYe ~ ton truck. very
o0o&lt;1 cond. 12.100.00. 1981
Ooctt• Power Rem . 4 -.-..
drive . very good cond .
u .100.00. 304· 891-3001

73

Cle-" 01t Straw . S1 .715 Bal•.
Coli 11 4·949· 3051.

71

77

Trucks for Sale

1177 ford ~ ton pi~ · up ,
11100. Colj l14 ·112·7597.

Now buying lhltll - corn or aar
corn. Call for latest quotes. Pllver
City Farm Supply, 814-441·
2985,

63.,

289 motor and tranamtuton,
caU Minervt at 30-4-17&amp;-•697.

1917 4 wheel dJ QMC truck.
tolded ,· WUI leMe oldet INCM "
or--Ill. Coll114 -379-2820

Upstairs, 3 B,ft 1 bath, kitchen
furnished. no. pets. Oep &amp; Ref.
238 First. $250/ mo
plus
utilitles.Call 614-441-4921.

Modern 1 BR apartment . Call
e14-446·0390

·e

Au.t o Pa"s
&amp; Accessories

Four 14 Inch SS CragerL lua
nuts and ,lwo tirls. $100.00.
304-e82-2428.

1972 Ford F-700 Stake l•uc ....
Has 1.200 glllon water lank and aiir brlkM, Run1 good. •2000 or B1
batt offer Can &amp;1•· 21•· 1418.

Drum . stU CB 700, 9 pc.
0700 00 Coli 304·675-1618

Oak Lumber for ••le .20 cents a
foot Cut on ban saw 614· 247 ·
3972

Troy lilt. 7 hp tiMer. 15 ft x 30 ft
abov• ground pool with deep
end. 1976 Pontiac Catalin1.
304·576-2B24.

Furnished apt. next door to
library. O"e profe~sional Adult
onlY. Parking. Ph. 448-0338.

56

Four. 14 inch unilug aluminum
slot1 for ule. Call 8.14-742 2450

AVON . Look at us now. Earn
Extra Money. 304-675-1429.

A PLANe HAS
COLLIDED WITti
THE PeAK&amp;!

(!) SportsLook (T)
'I
(!J Or. Who lnvaslion of
I
Timtts ·
'
1'
l[lJ Secret City
®GoodTimeo
. fJ1 (Z) Batttealllr Galaclica
8:051]) Dawn to Earth Stereo.
8:30 D (]) IUl NBC Nlgh.tly News
(!) All American Pulling
o
Serlu From Louisville,
Kentucky (A)
(JJ
(IJ ~ Newa Q
(I) NlghUy Buolneu Report
liD) e1121 CBS Newa
l[lJ National Academic
Champlonehlp 1987
o ·ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world Is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
® JeHersons
6:35 (l) l.elve It to Beaver
7:00 CD Hardcaltle Tnd
McConnlck
D (]) PM Mlogazlne
(!) SportaC.nter (L)
(JJ Entertainment Tonight
flJ (IJ People'• Court
(!J l[lJ MacNJIII Lehrer
NewtHour (1 :00)
liD) News
ll2l MoneyHne Current
reports on world economics
and financoal news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
IJII1121 IUl Wheal ol Fortune

"

Quality Fruits · and Vegetablaa
ret1il and whol... le. 8 . &amp; 5
Produce scroas from PIZU Hut,
Gallipolis. Ohio.

TONV"S GUN REPAIRS, hoi
reblueing, now taking order
orden for custom Mausers call
304-876-4631 .

•

CAPTAIN EASY

I.

Bu11dy II alto sax . Like new
1495 Cell 814-446-4823

Catalyllc Conwertera . only
$89 95. Most models . Installation al1o available. Muffler Man.
9 Slimpson Ave .. Athens. Ohio
, 800-843-3767.

1

Building Materials
Bloct, brick. sewer pipes, wlndOWI, llntela. etc. Claud• Win·
tert. Rio Orande. 0 . Call 614245-5121

2 Wheel Cheir1: one-electric,
sold for $3800. Used very linle,
Potty Chair- Adult . Ah -S2500.
Cell 614-446 -0646

Cara1ereo "Kenwood", likenew
8500 . 00 . Kenmore dry8r
$60,00 . Black Bert wood
burner. used 3 winters, good
cond $260 .00. 304-&amp;78 -2722.

'up.tairs unturmshed apartment
Utlhties paid. Carpeted. nochlkl ren or pets. Call614 -446-, 637

55 Building Supplies

57

SPACES FOR RENT - Troller
lots. Rt. 1 . Locust Road. back of
K IIi K 304-675 ·1076

IVIerclla11111se

76

Car battery-top po11, $12 ,
Power tools, Slereo. T11ier
frame, Misc. Box 219-E, Co• ·
Mercerville Rd ., Mercerville

Coleman Presidantal II electric
furnac::e and Coleman 3 ton
air-condhioner. Call 614-992 2894 ore 14-992 -5235

D

EVENING

•

D lll &lt;il flJ (IJ liD) Ill Gl
IUl News

1887 lnvad., 16'11. tt. V, haul. ~
open bow. 120 hp 1/ 0 , \
$9(200.00. 30.·175-2517.

0

Baby bed. coffee table. ·end
tables. long work table and ear
ch1ins, 304-176 · 4892.

Beautiful Pick-A· Poo puppies.
male and female, had •hots end
worm.d. $76 .00. 304·9373216"' 304·586 · 2217.

STANlEY Homecare Products,
Order today. M1ke your office &amp;
house cleaning ea1ier &amp; pleasureabfe. Call Stephanie. 614·
446-8886 .

0

TUES., JULY 28

T~~:t~~T S@~4UlA-&lt;Zt.~~"
CLAY R, POllAN

6:00 CD Big Valley

12 ft Sears Gilme Fisher fibargla•• boat, trailer. twivel Mill,
motQI'. co\ler, 2 · Jive wells.
06.600.00 . 304-07&amp;-1239 .

Maple den sofa. 2 · chairs. and
ottomlri *200.00. RCA upright
frH1•r. 12 cu ft, 8150.00.
304-175-&lt;M172.

Solid Hard Roell Maple Chme
Buffet by Cochran,$300 . 36 "
Heatilator ptpo and fan .SSO
Call 61.4 -446· 8646

1978 Pinto·V-1 . auto.- nice
1600. 1 &amp;' Aluminum bOat.
trail8f, MercUy 9 .9. 11500. Call
114-446 -7019.

14' flbarg ..... 18 hp E"nrude
motor end tfail• . e600. Call
304-875· , 518 .

3 po living roOm suite, 2 end and
1 coffee tabtes. good cond,
•eoo.oo. 304-882· 3191 .

Pure bred Siamese Kittens fo•
•ale. 814-948-2290 .

Electric fencer reachH 60 miles.
used 2 weeks. 1176. Antique
table. 100 yrs. old 860 . 304·
773-5397 ,

3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kyger
Creek School District. References Ph. 614·446-8621 .
·

Chest fruztr. 15.1 cu ft. efttt
6 :00' call .304-675 · 5646.

BidWell Cash Feed StOte: 1""
lAJ" water line. 180 lb. test and
100 lb teat , along with all
culvens and drain ptpe. Call for
the latell prices at 61 • ·3889688 .

For 1ale: 6000 BTU air condi·
lloner. $100. T.V. Antenna S16.
614-992-6362 after 6 :00.

.

Cheat frMitt. ?50 lb cap.
175.00. 304-B95·3111.

New Living Room suitea.l439.

Couch and chair Call 114-245&amp;112 .

•

18ft. aluminum 1111 loat with
trait•. 31 HP MAreury Motor.
Uve well, trolling motor. fish
tinct., 2 gH tanks, batt11riel. 1
powltf trim. Like new fgeraga
koptl . *4500- Call 114-812127.7. AIM. llltt:trlc i tove. dou ble oven. 1100. Call 814-7422211.
'

CCC · cortlllcoto1. 304 -1712443.

8179.9&amp;
•awe'rs. to
4
drew•r. ·S48 , 6 drawer. 119. 95;
End tables from •19.95 set
Used Furnit\lre. bedroom suite•.
full aized beda. twin bCKis and
rocken. Redlnersfrom t99.96
end up
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND

Space for small trailers. All
hook -ups Cable. Also etfieiency
rooms, air and cable Mason.
W Va. Call 304-773-5851 .

l - -- - - - - - - -

1 Y2 ac lot on Jerrys Run Rd. · Furnlehed.down..alrt, 3
Apple Or0'18, with rural water. 1nd beth. Olun, No"''· Adulll
only. O.poatl 1nd Ref. Alquired.
304-171-2383.
Coll-14·441-1519-

.

COUNTRY MOBILE H0mePJrk.
Rout~ 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailet"s. Call 614-9927479.

47 Wanted to Rent

rmt.

1

Office Space for Rent. Excellent
for Anorneys. Accountant. etc.
Close to Court HouN. Cell
W1seman Real Estate Agency.
614-446 -3644

614-379-2435 .

Furni1hed Efficiency $145 Utilitiel paid, share bath. 607
Second Ave., GalliPolis Ph
446-4416 after 7PM

!

Gr1cious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and RNerside Apart·
ments in Middleport. From
S216. including utilities. Call
614- 992 - 778~ . EOH .

2 BR . all utilities pd exupt
elec., furn or unfurn , sec dep
req 'ed . Con¥ement loc.tion
Caii614-446-855B .

14x70 Caravar, trailor 1 acre
land, garage. pnvacy fence.
located 1!. mile out Peacl'l Fork
Rd .. Pomeroy. 614-992-2473
or 61• -992-7512 .

''

Apartments New paint. nice.
good location. Call 304-875&amp;104.

1974 Schult. 65ll12 With tipout. All electric. gas or electric
l'leat. nftW central air Very good
condition 14x16 porch. Call for
apP9intm.,t 614-742-2190.

1976 Skyline 14~~:70 . 3 BR.
complete .with 1 1 x 22 Urban
patio Cover and door canapy
l1ke new condition. $10.500.
1974 12x60. 2 BR. e11cellent
condition. 86300. Delivered.
blocked and leveled on your lot .
Kingsbury Homes 900 E. Main
St. Pomer.oy, Ohio. f14 -9925587

.

rrf1s. end bath Centrally
located. One or two adults. Ref.
and Sec. dep. reca'ed. Call
614-446-0444.
'

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bedroom mobil6' home. s 'e t up
and reedy to move into. Patio
cover, steps, etc. Complete.
$6950. Call614 -992·5587

90 Days ume as eash with
lfiPpr0¥11d credit. 3 Mites out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to lfpm
Mon. lhru Sat Ph. e14-4410322.

4

1980 Libeny. Total electric, 2
bedroom. 1urnished , washer and
dryer, centralatr. Ca11614 992 7479

14x70 Nashua. 3 bedro~m. 1 1h
bath, partly furnished. gas dryer.
air conditioner W1ll rent ground
where it sets Free gas. water.
septic, garden. Call 614-667 6536.

Sof• end ehalra pri'C41d ftom
Uti to 1115. Tobloo f&amp;O lncl
up 10 $126. Hlde-t-beda t310
to 159&amp;. R•clln.,.. I 221 to
1315. Lompo 128 to '125.
DineUH $101 and up 10 •411.
Wood table w-1 chairt •211 to
1795. De1k. 1100 up to 1'375_
Hutches 1400 and up. Bunk
beds completi W·m-",..tes
e295a~d up to $315 . Baby beds
$110. Manreuftorboxsprings
full or twin t.l8. firm f78. end
188. Queen Htl *225. King
1360. 4 drawer ches1 189. Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Gat or electric
range f$375.' Baby . mattruses
141. Bed from01 •20 . .
$30 It King frtme $150. Good
se..C.ion of bedroom suit••·
metal,cabinets. headboards •30
end 141 to 1115.

r-:::~~~~::=~==~T~;==~~~~;;;:==-1 '8700.
room :suit8:1
Chet1from
of

Call614-367· 04~5

3 bedroom house for sale In
Pomeroy. 614-992-2285

FURNITURE

us •

-

for wheelchair. New brick hO'fle.
2 BA ., 2 bath1, beat appllancfl.
LR .. kitchen-dining room combined . Carpet. Inlaid vinyl. Full
'basement: with 2 car g~r-e•­
lot•· clouts and cabinets .
Priced to Sell. Cell 814-4460141.
•

LAVN~'S

rne Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

:oAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's bow to
- -·- AXYDLBAAXR

Dillard Water Service. Po'ola,
Ciltema. Wells. Oal;ve{y Anv
time. Call 614-446 7404-No
Sunday ul!•·

a

the

J J Water Service Swimming
pools. cisterns. well• Ph 6142•5- 9286
R &amp; R Water Service. HOme
ciaterna. wells. pools filled .
Formerly Jemes Boys Wtuer .
Coli 304 -67&amp;-6370 .
W•tterson 's Water Heu li ng ,
reaaon,ble rates. immedla le
2.000 gallon delivery, ·cisterns.
po~1. well , etc. call 304-6762919.
I .

Q

PEANUTS

Formerty Ken'• now John 'a ~
Weter Serv1ce. John Watteraon, ~
Jr . Owner 1.000 or 2.000 gal
..rvice. 304 -&amp;71-2248 .

110ME TODAY,
MAI~M

87

..THANK I{OU FOR
SWIMMING LESSONS

Upholstery

,,•

'

R a. M Custom Couches and ;
Aeupholst•rv. St. Rt. 7 . Crown 1 •
Cl1y, Oh. 114-211·1470, Eve. ,.
114-448-3438 . Open daily 9 to
4:30, 811. 9:30 IO 1:30. Oho 11o
new Uphost...ed.
"
'

Mowrev's Upholstering •ervinlJ
tricountyarea22'yea,.. The ben
In furniture upholstering. Clll
30•~· ·8:75 - •1&amp;4 for free
ntlmatas.

fonnatio~

,•
u

RC

a

WERE A QUIC~ ·
L.EIId~NE:K, SOPI-IIE ·'·

· · MA'fBE '(()lJ

SIIOULD TAKE
BAL.LET
LESSONS ..

/I_

~ ~lll::A~I People

l!llllgnOH

i1J NeweNight Uve

nawa
with Patrick Emory end
Kirsten Undqulst. (1 :00) ·
12:151]) MOVIE: Emba. .y (PG)
(1:30)
'12:30'CD Beat ol Oroucho

ern IDl Llll Night w1111
D1vld IMtltldMn

XPAK

U B P U,

OTU

F' T G' E K
'

'

R U ..._Q I' z K , - 0 K T D 0 K
y G D C M\
Yetltenl~fo• Cryptoquote: A HUNDRED HISSES

OUTWEIGH A'THOUSAND CLAPS.1liE FORMER COME
MORE DIRECTLY FROM 1liE HEAJ{T.,- CHARLES

·LAMB

.

,,.-

...,

•••

�P8ge 10-The D.Hy Sentinel

Tuesday, July 28, 1981:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

....---. Local briefs--- Predict hea,t wave will continue down south
Tree falls, causes pawer outage

..

Power was restored to area customers on Mulberry Heights a
little after 6 p.m. Monday evening following an outage that
occurred at 3:55p.m.
.
~ccording to Ron Ash, manager or t(Je P~meroy otrlce or the
Ohio Power .~omp11ny a tree fell over on Highland Road, shook a
pole which In turned caused a conductor to brea k at the James
Diehl residence on Mulberry Heights.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. offices of doCtClrs, Emergency
Medical Service, Senior Citizens Center and a n apartment
complex on Mulberry Heights were without ~l ectricty for two
hours and six mlntues while 246 customers were without power
for 54 minutes Ash reported.

By United Press International
Service forecaster L y le
Residents of Dixie and the Alexander.
Plains remained locked In the
Temperatures In those areas
grip of a deadly . nine-day. beat were expected to remain be. wave today while a languishing . tween 90 and 100 degrees today,
mass of cool Canadian air he said.
con linued to provide relief from
The heat . wave has been
mid-summer heat along rYJUCh of blamed In the deaths of at least
the East Coast.
nine people in Indiana, Illinois,
"The heat will continue from South Carolina, Georgia, Wyom·
South Dakota to Alabama and lng and Missouri.
Mississippi, and from Ge()rgla
The most recent heat-related
back Into Arkansas a nd Kan- death occurred Monday iii St.
sas," said National Weather Louts, where Kenneth Holt, 73.

Complete •••

'

Meigs EMS has six calls Monday

remai n In the region for much Of
the week. he said. " Probably by
the end of this week It will begin'
to wa r m up again along the East

appare11t ly died of heat stroke in
his non·alrcondltioned apart ment. Pollee said the tl'mpera-·
ture inside was 110 degrees ,
While there were few Indications that heat til these arl'as will
dissipate over the next few days ,
the East Coast's cool front is al so
taking its time moving ba ck
north, Alexander. said.
CooiEer air Is expected to

Coast."
'
· On Monday , storms that boiled: ·
up in the Great Lakes s pread east
and south from Mlnnes.ota to tht.!.
Carolinas, bringing tempora ry
relief from the heat to residents
in those areas.

Helmet fitting ThtLrsday

Area deaths

•

Hearings

Weather

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Wll·
liam Morris, Pomeroy: Gert ha
Hensley, Northup: Helen Davis,
Pomeroy.
Monday Discharges - Lillian
Gardner, Dessle Kuhn. Robert
Parsons.

On dean's list
Jonathan · Perrin, son of Mrs.
Wilbur ·Perrin, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, has. been named ot the
Dean's list for the 1987 spring
quarter at the University of
Cincinnati.

Dance set Saturday
, . An outside dance, open to
everyone, will be held Saturday 8
p.m. to 12 midnight at Eastern
High School. $2 single and $3 .
couple. No alcoholic beverages.
Rain cancels.
·

Balance .......... 15, 713 .37
Ending Fund Cash
Balance .... ...... 15,864 . 75
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
OPERATING RECEIPTSTuition ........ . ..... ..... 1 80.00

Food Services
Sates ...... ..... 1B9,804.53
Class Materials &amp;
•
Feeo ... ..... .. ...;;.iJ5.396 .60
Misc . Receipta ..... 1.114.82
Total .. ......... .... 226,496 .85
OPERATING DISBURSEMENTSEmployees Salaries &amp;
. Wageo ...... .... 202,545 .82
Employee• Retirement
Benefits ...... .. 71,634 .05

PUrchased
Sorvicoo .. ...... ..'.3,808 .98
Supplies &amp; i
Materials ... .. .260, 987.03
Capital Outlay
-Raptacoment .... 710 .64
Other Objocts .. .. ..... 226,00
Total .............. .639,911 .22
EKe. Rcpta. Ovor/ (Undor)
Oiob . ........ . .(313,4111. 37)
. !NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTSIStato Sourcoa .... 22,506.28
Fodorat

TRUST FUNDS .
OPERATING RECEIPTS Earnings on
Investments ..... 4.196.07
Total .. ...... ... .. .... .'.4. 195.07
OPERATING DIS.,
BURSEMENTS ........ 0 .00
EKe. Rcpto. Q.ver/IUnder)
Disb ............. .. .. 4.196.07
Disbursements &amp; Other
\.loos / Net ......... 4 ,196 .07
Beginning Fund Cash
Blanco ........ .. .24, 667.32
Ending Fund Cash
Batance .. .. ...... 2B, 762 .39
TOTALS
RECEIPTS :
Taxes .... .. ..... 1.969, 964 .05
Tuition ...... ........ 51 , 378 .84
Earnings on
(
tnveatmonts ... 48, 848.66
Food Services
So too .... : ...... t89,804, .63

Supplies 8r
-1
Materials ...... 260,9B7.03
Capilli! Outtoy - Replacement .... .... ... 710,64
Other Objects ........ .225 .00
Total Disbursements
(AU Funds) ...8.466 .623.72
EKe. Rcpts. Over/ (Under)
Diob ... . ... : ... (684,076.691
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS (Diobursemento)
Contributions &amp;
·
Donationi ........ 3.927.63
Proceeds from Sale
of Notes .... ... 228,9B7.00
State Sourcos .... 22,606 .26
Federal
Sources .......286,040 .14

Operating Transfars

- tn .. .......... ...28,980.07
Advances- In .. .:22,884.67
Refund of Prior Years
Expend ............... 402 .1 0
E,.;tracurricular
Operating Tranaf"'''
Actlvltleo ... ... 177.938.44
-Out .... ....... i28,980.07) .
Cla11 M1terials •
Advance•
Feeo . ..... .. .... ... 40,046.60
~-~o~;u~t~
..~·•.Prior
, ... ...122.
884.87)
Mise:
of
Years
Recolpto ......... 13,747.64
........ j3,402.BOi
GRANTS IN AID
Fin . Source•
State
17 489 33
Sources .... 5, 116,270.43 D ilbt.,oitmt'i"n't·,··ll
'
'
&amp; Other

R 1

1

Balance
6-30-87 .. .. 1,036,23'7.68
SUMMARY
INDEBTEDNESS NOTES
LONG &amp; SHORT TERM
Balance Beginning of
Period .. ........... ... .... .0 .00
NBW lasuas- During Fiscal Period .. ... 228.987,.00
Redeemed- During Fiecot PoriQd .............. .. o.oo
Balance
6· 30-87 .. ..... 228.987.00
MEMORANDA DATA
A11e01od
Valuation ... 104.204.836
Property TaX LeviesInside 10 Mitt ...... 3. 8000
Ouuido
·
1·0 MilL ....... .20.2000
ADM ......... .. ....... 2.6114.00
Number of Non·Cert:
,,
Employees ............ 96.0a
Number of Cert.
Employees ... .. .. ... 181 .00
t certify tho above report
lo be correCt and true, to he
best of my knowledge:

Jene fry, Treaaurer
of tho Board of Education
1814) 992-66110
(71 28, 1tc

'

\
~- ·-····- -

•.

0657

..

·Cloudy tonight. Low in
mid 60s. (:loudy Thursday.
Chance of. thunderstorms.
Highs between 85 'and 90.

.

•

e

Vol. 3'1, No. 56
Co'7:iphtN: 1987

•

at y

•

Pomeroy

enttne
2 Seetions12 Pages

Middleport, Ohio, WednesC:Iay, July 29, 1987

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

•

Meigs board •fills some coaching vacancies

Notice of appeal filed

-.

'

---=.:.:=::....:.....:.:~.::....:_--

cooper.a te with Conrail to es tab· 'The village would provide the
!ish the loa ding facilit y s ince its labor to insta ll the course a nd the
construction will Increase the tax company would sen&lt;) a represen·
base In that area and create a few tative to supervise the lnstalla·
jobs. Conrail is being invited to lion. Gilmore said (,000 square
m eet with council in a future feet of space would be adeq~ate
session to discuss the necessary for ·an 18-hole course and one
arrangements .
employee would be needed to
Councilman Bob Gilmore re· manage the facility .
ported that the annual Middle·
Although the initial Investment
port Block Party, sponsored by poses a problem. council agreed
Middlt&gt;port Chamber of Com· the mini-course Is a good Idea
merce, has been schl'duled for a nd will consider the proposaL
Saturday Sept . 19 with streets to Ma yor Hoffman said he would
be blocked· off by 7 a .m. A dinner c heck Into poSsible fundin g
the night' before at Da ve Diles sources.
·
In Meigs County Common Pleas Copurt Karen L. .Johnson,
Park. followed by a Blue .Jean
Gilmore sa id he believed If
Mason, filed a notice of appeal against James L. Mayfield ,
Ball a t the American Legion s uch a fa~ !lily were started next
administrator of the Bureau of Workers Co mpensation , the
building, will precede t he block sp'ring, it would pay for Itself by
Industrial Commission of Ohio a nd Veterans Memorial
pa rty.
summer's end.
.Hospital.
Steps were ta ke n by council to
Gilmore questioned If council
In the same court the marriage or Crystal Lee and and Randy
abandon
s treets a nd alleys in the
would s upport a proposa l by
Joe Lee was dissolved.
area
of
the
village where a new
c ha mber to ban bicycles a nd
skate boards from the roped off nursing home is to be con·
a rea of. t'he block par ty. Council structed . It was noted that these
agreed to the proposa l and s treets and alleYs ''exist on paper
sugges ted the posting of.sighs to o nly" and that offi cial aba ndonAll boys who will be playing football at Southern High School
a lert youngsters of the prohibi· ment Is necessary only to clear
will be fitted for helmets Thursday at 6:30p.m. In the football
tion of bicycles a nd ska te boards title to the. property , as requested
building.
by Bernard Fultz, Middleport
dUring the event.
v
illage solicitor .
·Counc il also extendl'd permisPlans have been finalized for
sion for parklng m eters to be
the
village's purchase of the
covered on Friday to fac ilitate
out Empire Furniture
·burned
block party set up , and to have
building
using approxlmat~ly
trees along the main street to be
$16,500
In
Communit y Develop·
trimm~d prior to the block party.
Joshua
Lynch,
Middleport:
one
Gilmore al so' reported on infor· m e nt Block Grant fund s throu gh
Clyde Morlan Jr.
nephew. Terry Willis, Chicago:
mation related to the insta llation the Me igs Count y Commission·
Clyde.J . (C.J . I Morlan Jr., 23, 'one slster·ln-law, Mary Gilkey .' of a minia ture golf course near er s. The property Is now to be
Middlepor t, and severa l cousins. the swimming pool a t Hart inger transferred to Mitchell a nd Deb919 32nd St., Vi~r.na , W.Va. , died
In addition to her pare nt s she Pa rk. He sa id he s poke with bie Mea dows of Middleport for
Sunday afternoon at his
was
preceded in death by her Brian Billings, director of parks cons truct ton of a two·s tory com·
residence.
husband,
Bert on July 26. 1969. and recreat ion for Point Plea· m ercia! building wi th parking lot
Born July 9, 19641n Wood Co.,
one
daughter,Elsie Hess, two sa nt , W.Va .. who told him Point at the rear for employee~.
W.Va. to Clyde J . and Ethel
sisters
,
Margaet
Ward a nd Pl easa nt is plea ~ed with revenue Accordi ng to a pr ior agrc.oement ,
Lauderman · Morlan Sr.. .of
Grace
Manley
arid
onP niece gPncrated by ·a ininl-cours~ a t the new construction Is to be at
Vienna, he was employed by Pet e
Doris
Gaffney
..
Krodel Park a nd is co nsider in g leas t a $125.000 Investment to be
and Libby's Auto Repair ,
Funeral
se
rvices
will
be
he
ld
the ins tallation of a second funded through loca l sources.
Vienna.
Thursday
at
11
a.m
.
at
the
The proposal from the Meadows
course
In Point Pleasa nt.
Besides his parents, he is
Rawllngs·Coa
ts-Biowe•
Funeral
Gilmore Is proposing council for thl' property, the o nl y one
survived by his wife, Yvonne
Home with AI Hartso n official · consider t·he purchase of an received by counc il. wa s ac·
Christy Morlan, VIenna: one
ing. Burial will be in Riverview 18- hole mini·course to provid e cepted o n May 8.
brother, Michael E . Morlan ,
Cem
etery. Friends may call a t additi ona l revenue for the \'illage
Authoriza tion wa s given b.v
VIenna; one sister, Betty G.
the funeral home Wednesday as we ll as recreational opportuni- councH for Hoffm a n to apply for
Kuhn, Tuppers Plains: and his
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
ties for resldenis of the commu n- a gra nt under the Ohio Elderlv
grandmother, Betty Crampton,
it y a nd other areas of Meigs a nd Hllndlcap Tr a nsit Fare As ..
'
VIenna .
Edith
Fil'kisen
Cou·nty. Gil more has been In s istanc!' _Program for a pproxl·
' Services will be Wednesda y ,
.
.
.
touch with a Pl'nnsy lvania· firm mat!~· $35,000 to $40,000 to subsid·
2:30 p.m., at Leavitt Funeral
Edtth Ins F1cklsen. 75, Ra- which builds mlnl·cou rses a nd izl' Blue Streak Ca b Com pany
Home, Parkersburg, with Rev .
vens v.:ood ViHage, Ravenswood, ,. suggests th a t council consider w hich provides ha lf fare tra ns· .
Mlc.hael McPherson offlciating.
formerly
of Coolville .d,ied Mon- purchasi ng a $20.000 J)ackag£' portatlon for th e elder ly and
Burial will be In Shiloh Cemetery
day
at
Ravenswood
VJJ,age. ·
which would include sh ipping. ha ndicapped.
In Wood Co., W.Va. Friends may
She was born July 26, 1912 in
Othe r matters dlscussl'd b ,l '
call at the funeral home aft er 7
Wes
t
Columbia
to
the
la
te
·Boyd
cou
ncil included litter probl ems
p.m. Monday .
and Ma rgie Litton Fle tc her .
at the s h e lt e~ house a t Ha rtinge r
She was a for mer bookkeeper
Park. problems with specific
Blanche Gilkey
Co ntinued from page 1
and clprk at Mill 's .Jewelry Store Marine was fired from the NSC strel'l lig hts bl inki ng on a nd off
a nd th e new state law regarding
J;llanche Ward Gilkey, 97, Mid·
and a member of Stewart Baptist s taff.
Chu rch.
dleport died Monday at Veterans
cin a nother · aspect of the ow ners hip of P!t bull do~s .
Present for the meet ing In
· Memorial Care Unit.
She is suJ•vived by two brot h- sca nda L Meese disput ed tes tim·
Shew as born February 26, 18~ e rs, Othal J . Fletcher, Ravens- ony by North a nd oth e r ~ that he a ddit'lon to th e ma yor and Gil·
In Gallla County the daughter of
wood and Kermit G. Fletcher, was involved in efforts to prepare m ore wl'rl' Council men Dewey
the late Andrew and Selina
Cha rles ton: six gra ndchildren;
fa lse chronologiPs of the arm s Hor ton. Jim C'latwort hy . Jac k
Sa tterfiPid and William Walters,
Katherine r.rahm Ward. Shew as
nine great grandchildren and sales la st faiL
a member of the Middleport
sever111 nieces and neph ews .
Although he saw a fa lse ac· a nd Cle rk·Treasu rer .Jon B·uc k.
Church of Christ and Phllathea
In additlon to her parents she coum ·" for the first t ime" at a Cou nc.tl m a n Allen King was
Society of the church. She was a
was preceded in deat h bv her Nov . 20 meeting to n•view a bsent .
homemaker.
husband , Her man Eber Flcklse n testimony C IA Di rector William
Survivors InclUde grandson on November 30, 1978, lwo Casey planned to give Congress Issued lil'cnscs
and wife, Arther .and .Jane Hes s, brothers, Erskin a nd Ira .
the nex t day, Meese asserted.
Middleport; two great gran· ,,. Funeral SP rvlces will be held "The truth is I di d not at the tim e
Jssul'd marria ge lic!'nS!'S In
daughters. Christi Lynch, Mid· Wednesday at 11 a. m . at the have knowledge s uffic ient to Meigs Count y Probate Court
dleport and Cathy King. Circle- White Funera l Home In Coolville a llow me to make any sort of were David Mark King. :10.
with the Rev . Bill Angel official · judgment regarding th e accu· Pomeroy , and Cynthi a Dar lene
v)lle; one great, great grandson.
lng. Burial will be in Coolville racy of the proposed tes timony, Blackwood. 29, Byesville; John
Cemetery . Friends ma y ca ll at
or the pre pared chronology, or Robert .Jeffers, ~Ci. Po mero~· and
the fun era l hom e tod ay from 6 to the revisions or corrections that Robin Ann ett e Duga n. 2o,
9.
were be ing sugges ted. "
Pomeroy .
South Central Ohio
Mostly•sunny toda;·, with highs
In the mid 80s. Mostly clear
Public Notice
Public N otic~
Public Notice
Public Notice ·
tonight. with a low between tiO
and 65. Mostly sunny Wednes·
day, with highs in the mid 80s.
• Sources .. ..... 265 .040.14 Federal
· !Contihued from Page 7)
Uses/ Not ..... (66.617 .36)
Operating Transfers
The probability of precipitaSoutces ....... 267,450, 06
Beginning
Fund Cash
In
..
..
...........
23
.260
.00
Exc:
Rcpts.
Overi
Under
Total Receipts tAll
tion Is near zero through
Bolance ... .. .. .796.604 .62
Advances - In .... 6 .600 .00
Disb
..
........
.....
..
2,083
.
20
Fund&amp;!
...
...
7.872.447.03
Wednesday .
Ending Fund C81h
Refund of Prior Years
OTHER FINANCING
DISBURSEMENTS :
Winds will be light and from SOURCES / USES Batonce .... .... 729,887.26
EKpend ............... 1 06 .10 Instruction ... 4,433.642 .01
Cash
in Banks
Advances
the northeast today and tonight.
Contributions &amp;
Supponing SerINet) ............ 484.906 .63
- Out .. ........... (9, 800 .00)
· Donations ........ 1, 587 . 66
Ohio Extended Forecast
vices ........ .2.922. 164.93
Investments .... 244.981 . 73
Total Other Fin. Sources
Operating Transfers
Extracurricular
Thursday through Saturday
Total Fund
(Uses( .... ...... 307 ,711 . 50
- In ............. ... ........ 0 .70
Activities.. .. .. 204,191 .50
Fair through the period. with Operating Transfer's
Batariceo ... ... 729.B87. 26
Disbursements &amp; Other
Debt Service .. .356.614.06
' SUMMARY
Uoeo/
Net
..
....
..
(5,
703.87
highs in the 80s Thursday and
- Out ..... .. ... ... (3,520 .071
Employees Salaries &amp;
INDEBTEDNESS
!BONDS)
Beginning
Fund
Cash
Total
Other
Fin
.
Sources
near 90 Friday and ·Saturday .
Wages .. .... .. .. 202.645. 62
Balance
Beginning
of
Balanco
..
..
........
4,348
.63
(Uses) .. .... . ...... 1,931 .82)
Employees Retirement
Overnight lows will be In the mid Disbursements
Period ....... 1,343 , 659 . ~ ',
Ending Fund Cash
&amp; Other
! Benefits .... .... ,71.634.05
60s early Thursday and near 70
Redeemed - During Fi'Balance ...... ... . j1 , 355 .241 Purchased
Uses/ Net ... ......... 161 .3B
. cot Perlod ..... 307.'&lt;1 .92
NON· EXPENDABLE
Friday and Saturday mornln~ts .
Beginning Fund Cash
Services ... ..... ... 3.808.98

Daily Number
. 097
Pick 4

·Page 4

Continued from page 1

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Monday; Tuppers Plains a·l 3:20 a.m. to Route 681 for Louise
Posey Who was treated but not transported; Pomeroy at 6:13
a.m. to Route 143 for William Morris to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 10:07 a.m. to Siilem Township for Charles l
Barrett to HoJzer Medical Centgr; Pomeroy at 1: 08 p.m. to ·
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Ann Cook to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 1: 11 p.m. to Route 143 for
Kenneth Welch to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at ·
3:55 p.m . to an elec!rlcal fire at a downed power line on
Mulberry Ave.
·

. Ohio Lottery

Payton
inks new
contract

I'm RAIN

I~ ;:.]sNow
FRONTS: "

Warm

"

Cold

~ SHOWERS
. . Static . . . Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Showers &lt;tnd thunderstorms will be
scattered over eastern secllons of th~ Mississippi VaUey,thelower
Ohio and Tennessee valleys, the southern Atlantic Coast stale~~, the
central Gull Co;~s t states and south TeKas. Scatte red s howers and '
thuniJerstorms will develop In the afternoon and evenl~g over ih 1•
Rock it'S and th•• central nnd southern plateau .
·

I

Daily stock prices
(As of 10: :10 a.m. )
Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Srn it h
of Blunt Ellis &amp; J, ucwl

-I

Ped N~ i

By NANCY YOACHAM . :
.
Sentinel St.llff Writer
Although a few Meigs Local School District
coac hing positions were filled Tueda y night when
the school board met In regular session, several
coac hing positions remain unfilled.
Hired last night under supplementaiconlracts
as assistant varsity football coaches for the
upcoming year were Mick Childs and Kevin
Sheppard. Appointed by the board as an unpaid
volunt eer assistan t varsity football coach for the
yea r was Jeff Werry.
John Blake was employed as a junior hig h
football coach for 1987-88 and at the request of
Robert Ashley, .varsity football coach, was
designated by the board as head football coach at
the lunlor high,
Hired under a supplem ent al contract as juni or
hl~h football coach was Tom Probst.
Non-certified Individuals hire!~ . under pur·
c has ed services. contracts as junior high coaches

granted a maternity leave of absence without pay ·
and Snowden was granted 'use of her accumulated
sick leave and the remainder of her absence as
unpa id maternity leave.
Accepted as tuition students for one year were
John Burdette, Bryan Durst and John Bentley, a ll
of whom have been released from their respectiv e
school districts for attendance at Meigs.
Superintendent Dan Morri s recommend ed no
action be taken on a letter from Mrs. Gary Acree
regar ding her so n participating in foot ball at
Eastern Local until more informa tion is
avail able.
The district's breakfast-lunch charges for this
year were increased by $.10. Breakfasts for
kindergarten through eighth grades were raised
from $.60 to $, 70. Lunches for kindergarten
thro.u gh eighth grades were raised from $.90 to $1
and lunches for grades nine through 12 were
raised from $1 to $1.10.
Assistant Superintendent J a m es Carpenter

were Carson Crow and Robert Eason. A board
resolution was passed stating thai these positions
wer e advertised . but no qualified certified
applicant was available. Both Crow and Eason
have been coaching at the junior high level for a
number of years.
Hired as boys reserve basket ball coach fo r
1987-88 was Cliff Kennedy .
The board accepted the resignation of teacher
Constance E . West effective at 'the end of the
1986-87 contract year.
Hired as a teacher for 1987·88 was Saundra
Tillis. Employed as a kin'dergarten aide was Mary
Bet.h M~s ser . Employed as a cook at Sali sbury
Elementary was Ruth Pearson.
.
Hired as paraprofessl~nals under purchased
serV Ices agreements were Jan et Lee Neal Russell
as high school cheerleadlng advisor and Ma ry
Hudson as junior high clieerleadi ng advisor.
The bo ard ·granted leaves of absence to Chery l
D. Bailey and Carolyn Snowden . Bailey was

Mog u l... ................ .48\';
Goodyea r T&amp;R .. ... .. .. ......... :70
Hec k's Inc ....... : .............. ..... 31,4
Limlt~ln c ............ 4 6~
Mul !imf'(li" In C' ................... 71',4
Firm
l' rh-c
Rax Res taura nt s .................. 5¥.
Am Ell'et rlc Power ...... ....... 27 •,
Robbins &amp; M;·crs .................
AT&amp;T .. ..................... ...........11'•
Sh o n cy ·~ lnr ....................... 29!1.
As hla nd Oil ........... ......... .... 67' 0 · We ndy'&gt; Int i. ...................... 10%'
Bob Eva ns Farms .. ............ ... 25 Worthington lnd .............. .. .. 2 1 ~
Charming Shoppcs ...... ...... .. :10 '~

reported tl)at reduced .p rice breakfast and
lun ches are now at the maximum charges allowed
a nd may not be increased. Reduced breakfast s
a nd lunches at all grade levels will remain at $.30
a nd and $.40 respectively. Carpenter reported
that last year the district lost about $25,000on the
sale of 240,000 regular priced lunches. Raising the
lunch and breakfast prices by $.10 will help the
program to break even he said. Morris reported
that. about 42 percent of students In the · dls trclt
receive fr ee and reduced brea)dast and lunches.
It was further reported that the district receives
federal reimbursement for reduced price m eals
in an amount greater than the amounts students
pay fo r reduced m eals . )VIany food items are
priced separately at the high school level and
J ames Miller, principal, suggested the board
consider raiSing the prices of these alacarte
it ems. The boa rd said they would consider
Miller's suggestion.
Continued on page 12

Name Weaver new manager
of .Mountaineer Power plant

9*

Char les D. Weaver wi ll suc·
. ceo;d William M. Robinson a s
manager of Appalachian Power
Company 's Mountaineer Plant at
New Haven following Robinson' s
retirem en t on July 31, the company a nnounced Tuesday .
Succeeding WPaver .as ass ist·
ant plant man ag~r will be Cha·
r les A. Powell.
Robinson, a nat lve of Union·
town, Pa .. attended Way nesbu rg
College for two years and re·
celved a Bachelor of · Science

SAFE DRIVING

BEGINS WITH
SAFE TIRES
WE HAVE NEW nRES IN
MANY PRICE RANGES

Degree in Mechanical Engipeer· Lyn, Va ., and became manager
ing from West VIrginia Univer·
in 1969. He was named plant
sit y. He join ed Appalachian in
m a na ger . of the Mountaineer
1%1 at its Ca bin Creek Plant and
Plant In 1977.
rose throug h the positions of test
Weaver, a native of Chillien gineer. m a intenance foreman
cothe. Ohio, holds a Bachelor of
and plant e ngineer.
Science Degree In Meehan leal
He transferred to the Cllnch
Engineering from Ohio State
River Plant at Carbo, Va.,ln 1958 . University. He also attended the
as maintenance su pervisor and
American Electric Power Manin 1962 was named operations . agement Program at Ohio State.
s uperv isor. In 1966 he was
He began his utility career In
promot ed to assistant plant man- 1970 as a plant engineer at
oft he Glen lyn Plant In Glen
Continued on page 12 .

See Us Today For Your Size

r------...
P1SS/8DR13

$29(!.~
Steel Belted All Season
Radials Whitewall
1SS/80R13.......... S35.00
18S/80Rll .......... S41 .2S
19S/75R14 .......... 544.95
205/75R14 .......... '46.00

205/7SR15 .......... '48.25
225/75RIS .......... S53.00
225/7SRIS .......... 553.00
23S/7SR1 S .......... sss.qs

. POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
1

600 EAST MAIN ST.
1192 ·2094
Alignment-Most (ars1J4 ,SO

:Z •

POMEROY
Brake Service

ROOF
PROBLEMS?
We have the
answer with our
new "TOPCOAT"
liquid roofing
system. Pressure
spray applie.d over
existing roof.
, This Elastomeric material is excellent for commercial flat roofs and metal barn roofs. Also may be applied to
most residential roofs.
FREE ESTIMATES: Call 992-2.444

or Mail This Ad ·yo

TOPCOAT ROOFING SYSTEM
93 7th Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 45760
NAME: ............................ ..............................................,.. .
'

ADDRESS: :..................................... ;· ··- ...... :............. .

Cln': .. ................................................... ........... ...............
PHONE: ................................................................. ..... ...

liRIDGE MAV REOPEN IN MID-AUGUSTThe Pomeroy ·M&amp;~&lt;on Bridle. ciO!ied lo tralllc
slncl' March 30, may reopen In ·mid -August

.

.

accordinl( to .Jay Maidens ol Maldens·JJenkins
CoD!Itructlon. Above, workers continue bridge
deck ~:onstructlon under the hot summer skies.

Judge rules cities must be
paid· revenue sharing funds
WASHINGTON I Ul'l) - Local offlchds are
cl1eerin1 a federal judge's rulln~ that the Reagan
admlnbltratlon wrongly wlthhl'ld Sl80 million In
. revenue·sharlnJ! funds and th11t the money must
be paid to more·than 150 clUes and counties.
"This Is joyous occasion lor cities," said ,J,
'Tho11111s Cochran, executive director of the U.S.
Conlerencl' of Mayors .alter U.S. J)istrlct Court
,Jud!Je ,Junf' Green said Tuesday the Treasury
Department had wron1IY "sequestered " the
revenue sha·rln!J funds. "Ju.~tlce has prevailed. "
"The bureaucratic anogance (of the administration) has been tested and reverSed in the courts
and $180 million Conire88 has given to cities wUI
he sent hack where It came from and back where
It belonJtS," Cochran added.
In her ruling, Green ordered the sequestered ·
lundti released and dlstrjhuted by 1\ug. L8. A
Treasury Department spokesman satd the
agency has not decided how to respond to the
ruling.
The case wa.s brought by the National League of
Cities, the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the
National A!ISOciatlon of Counties as well as 10
local jurisdictions. It named Treasury Secrl'tary
James ·Baker as defendant.
They argued Baker and the administration
acted Illegally in "sequestering" $180 mOtion in
1986 revenue-sharlnJ! progr11111 lunds under the

a

CHARLES WEAVER

Meese
returns
.
to stand

Gramm· Rudman-llolllngs budget deficit redut:·
ln~t process.
" We feel that the ruling Is a clear signal that the
revenue· sharing entitlement was Improperly
witbbeid and should be promptly distributed,"
added Alan Beals, executive director of the
National l..ea~~;ue of Cities
'Under the revenue-sharing program, which
expired last Sept. 30, Ihe federal government gave
tax dollars to some :19,000 local government units
lor a wide range of uses determined by the local
government.
When Congress ended the program, It aiso said
that "all entitlement payments which·, are
required to be made under the Revenue Sharing
Act be made In accordance with the Act."
Baker and the admlnlstratlonr however, lnvuk·
lng tbe lerms of I he deflcil reduction law,
withheld, or sequl'stered, SUM! million of the final
$4.1 bUIIon appropriated hy Congress lor fiscal

!1186.

.

.

.

.!The local governments, however, argued the
sequesCered money should have been made
avllilahle at the berlnnlng olllscal 1987.
The disputed funds affect more than 150
counties arid communities, ranging from $10.4
mUilon lor New York City to S20,1l00 lor Fargo,
N.D., and $13,300 lor Minnehaha County, S.D:

Concern mounts over .guH escorts
BAHRAIN iUP1) -The U.S.
Pe rsian Gull escort fleet. h~;~plng
to salvage its damaged prestige,
Is working to resume operations
by Friday amid mounting criti·
clsm at borne and abroad.
In washington. Pentagon ortl·
· · clals said a !lllnefleld has bee~
discovered In the gulf channel
. south of Kuwait where the
·supertankerBrldgetonhltamlne
Friday. Officials said seven
underwater explosives were recovered In the area .
The mine that ripped a gaping ,
hole In the . American· nagged
· Bridgeton effectively grounded
· :the nine-ship . u.s, Middle East
• · Foi&lt;ce In the Persian Gulf as well
: ; as ihe Reagan administration's

new policy.
Observers and critics said
American prestige In the region
also was damaged by the explos!on 18 miles west of Iran's Farsi
Island.
Tile two tankers being escorted
were the first Kuwaiti vessels to
re·reglster In the {.lnlted States,
run up the Stars and Stripes and
thereby receive U.S. naval protectlon under President Rea ·
gan's controyerstal esco·r t
policy.
Analysts said the escort operalion Is unlikely to continue much
longer unless the Navy can
neutralize the mine threat.
Gulf shipping sources said the
tankers would leave Kuwait by

...
•

Friday und.e r a U.S. escort to
Include anti-mine helicopters .
Today, the naval task force
was off Bahrain In the central
gulf, while tht:&gt; mlne· damaged
Bridgeton and the Gas Prince
were In Kuwait, 'to the north,
preparing to steam south. Offl·
clals rear mines, believed laid by
Iran, turk In the waters between.
This places U.S. fleet com·
mander, Rear Adm. Harold
Bernsen, In a tight spot, because
the Navy has no minesweepers In
the gulf and It would take at least
a week for the two now in service
in the United States to get there.
Though Saudi Arabia has two
minesweepers, It Is reluctant to
get Involved 1n the u.S. effort

•

By DANA WALKER
and JOSEPH MIANOWANV
' WASHINGTON (UP!) -Attorney General Edwin Meese. accused of conducting a lax invest!·
galion Into the Iran· Contra
controversy on behalf of his close
friend President Reagan, maintains the adminlstra(lon's worst
scandal might not have been
uncovered if not for his personal
efforts last fall.
In his first day of testimony at
the congressional Ira n· Contra
hearings , the nation's chief law
office r calmly defended the casual · nature of his November
•:tac t-finding Inquiry" by bl amIng the confusing and conflicting
accounts he received from toplevel colleagues at the time.
Meese pointed out It was his
investigation th at exposed the
diversion of money to Nicaraguan Contra rebels from secret
U.S. arms sales to Iran - and
judging by the r('action from
. some of his Interrogators Tuesday, he appeared to fight off
major criticism successfully and
without an apology.
The attorney general was
called ba ck for more testimony
this afternoon, however. and a
partisan baH!e was expected
between Repu bllcans and Democrats who disagree In a fundamental view of his actions as the
scandal unfolded:
Did he move quickly as a
conscientious Investigator who
adequately' pursued a possibly
criminal situation, or did he
dawdle as a friend of the

..

, ..

MEESE TESTIFIES- Attorney General Edwin Meese testified
at the Iran-Contra bearings Tuesday. (UP.))
pres ident who gave his Intentions liam Weld, head of .the de'paTt·
away so obviously that major ment' s crimina l division.
Rodlrio said Weld had va inly
evidence was destroyed?
. Meese responded unemotion- urged an immedlale . criminal
ally Tuesday to qu estions from probe of the lran affair last fall,
the chief lawyer for the House but an angry Meese demanded
committee In the case, jumping Rodino retract the deposition
vigorously to his own defense untO he could study It, saying, " I
only when the allegations got · think you',ve go I things mixed up
.
tougher unde~ Rep . Peter Ro· here!"
dlno , D-N .J ., chairman of the
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawali,
House Judiciary Committee that chairman of the Senate commit·
ov e r sees the Just I.c e 'tee, concluded Meese "did pretty
Department.
well In acqultt lng himself ' TuesRodlno and Rep . Dick Cheney, •• day but could expect tougher
R -Wyo., vice chairman of the . questions at the hearing d\!layed
House Iran·Contra committee. for a few hours today because of a
indicated there would be confilct • morning memorial service for
today over a private deposition
the late Commerce Secretary
given to Investigators earlier by Malcolm Baldrige.
.
Assls~ant Attorney General Wll·
Continued on page J:l
'-··-

'

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